ok lets do it this way.
I did the calculations of the OP in this thread, with the given information
400' of 300Kcmil
400' of #6 EGC
going from the resistance table 8 in chapter 9 at 75?C resistance
300 Kcmil has a resistance of .01784 @400 feet
# 6 has a resistance of .204 @400 feet
this gives us a total fault circuit resistance of .22184
If the voltage from the ungrounded to the X0 is 120 volts you will have about 541 amps of fault current.
if the voltage from the ungrounded conductor to the X0 is 277 volts you will have about 1248.6 amps of fault current
if at 240 volts expect around 1081.8 amps
now every one of these will open a 150 amp breaker.
so why would we need a larger EGC other than the code says so.
The only time would be, if the panel with the breaker in it is also fed by a very long run and has feeders conductors close to the size of the circuit breaker feeding this circuit, like when we see a 200 amp panel feeding a 150 amp circuit, it might be a problem if the 200 amp has long feeders? this is why we need to have a PE stamp to say the #6 is ok
I just don't see it, and as Bob said in post 8 this code change was not made in the realm of safety. It was for the convenience of inspectors.
If I'm wrong in my caculations for a fault let me know
