ericsherman37
Senior Member
- Location
- Oregon Coast
Hello everyone, this is my first post. I'm an apprentice and I'm in the process of preparing for my Oregon licensing exam. I have quite a while still, but it never hurts to prepare early.
Anyway, I've got a question regarding parallel conductors. I ran into the issue a while back on the job and wasn't quite sure how to proceed. I got a couple different opinions from a couple different journeymen and that of course lends to my confusion.
If you're paralleling conductors, say for a feeder circuit, do you first find the equivalent single conductor, and divide up the circular mil area by the number of parallel runs and then select the appropriate conductors to parallel? Or do you divvy up your parallel runs based on their ampacities in 310.16?
I am leaning toward the latter, but I have never had this question conclusively answered by anyone. I appreciate the input, thanks!
Anyway, I've got a question regarding parallel conductors. I ran into the issue a while back on the job and wasn't quite sure how to proceed. I got a couple different opinions from a couple different journeymen and that of course lends to my confusion.
If you're paralleling conductors, say for a feeder circuit, do you first find the equivalent single conductor, and divide up the circular mil area by the number of parallel runs and then select the appropriate conductors to parallel? Or do you divvy up your parallel runs based on their ampacities in 310.16?
I am leaning toward the latter, but I have never had this question conclusively answered by anyone. I appreciate the input, thanks!