Expension joints for EMT

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lile001

Senior Member
Location
Midwest
There are expansion joint fittings available for EMT. I can find reference to expansion joints in 300.7 (B), which requires them "where necessary", a rather vague requirement.

1. Would an expansion fitting always be required at a building expansion joint, considering that some "give" would be expected with a normal EMT installation? Especially if the run is short?

2. Here is a calculation of expansion in 10 feet of EMT over a typical temperature range in my state:

Expansion coefficient of steel 6.50E-06 in/in/?F per NEC 300.7 (B) FPN


for 10 feet of conduit: 120 inches
6 F design temperature winter
99 F design temp summer
not subject to direct sunlight

93 delta T, ?F
0.072" expansion in 10 feet of conduit due to temperature change.

I would argue that .07" of expansion is negligible, and expansion joints are not needed in runs of EMT under 10 feet.

Any opinions?
 
Concrete and steel have pretty close coefficients of expansion. Not identical, but within about 10% of each other...

If there's any concern, just put a superfluous Z-bend in the run somewhere.
 
lile001,

If that 10' length of EMT was leaving one 'concrete' type building and was

directly entering another 'concrete' type building,I would use expansion

fitting.
 
For us it is generally in the specs to use expansion joints when crossing a building expansion joint, beyond that it seems like common sense.
 
I've only encountered this in the type of situation Iwire mentions. We just put a flex to emt coupling in the run and about a foot of flex, then back to emt and continue on our merry way. One particular job we had to put pipe bonding clamps and a bondwire so that the flex wasn't carrying the fault.

But to answer you question, I don't know of any expansion fitting for emt.
 
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