ToxiKing
Member
- Location
- Philippines
- Occupation
- Electrician
A construction site is being constructed. Among the loads, there are multiple 3-phase Branch Circuits. 14 to be exact. 7 of them (load current of 40 Amperes, the farthest is 70 meters away from the Panel Board) have successfully installed. The conductor and conduit size recommended on plan is 4 AWG THHN within 2" PVC Conduit each circuit. 4 AWG has 85 Ampere ampacity at 75 deg C and 95 Amperes at 90 deg C.
I calculated the Voltage Drop and found it out to be 4.59V (2 percent %VD)
Now, big miscoordination happened. 7 circuits were installed but there are no other way to install the other 7 circuits (load current of 40 Amperes, the farthest is 30 meters away from Panel Board) in an aesthetical way. My proposed solution is to insert each of this 7 circuits to the first 7 circuits successfully installed. Meaning, one 2" PVC will now contain 6 pcs 4 AWG current carrying conductors and 2 pcs 10 AWG ground conductors. 2" PVC Conduit has enough space to be filled with 16 pcs 4 AWG. 4 AWG will have an adjusted ampacity of 76 Amperes, still greater than the 40 Amperes load. All were good. Perfect!
But..
If you are on this situation, would you recommend the same? On this proposed solution, what would be the new voltage drop? Is the calculated 4.59V drop of the first circuit unaffected? But there would be a heating effect caused by second circuit right? We know that Voltage Drop is directly proportional to Resistance (which is affected by the temperature).
Your experience and knowledge are appreciated.
I calculated the Voltage Drop and found it out to be 4.59V (2 percent %VD)
Now, big miscoordination happened. 7 circuits were installed but there are no other way to install the other 7 circuits (load current of 40 Amperes, the farthest is 30 meters away from Panel Board) in an aesthetical way. My proposed solution is to insert each of this 7 circuits to the first 7 circuits successfully installed. Meaning, one 2" PVC will now contain 6 pcs 4 AWG current carrying conductors and 2 pcs 10 AWG ground conductors. 2" PVC Conduit has enough space to be filled with 16 pcs 4 AWG. 4 AWG will have an adjusted ampacity of 76 Amperes, still greater than the 40 Amperes load. All were good. Perfect!
But..
If you are on this situation, would you recommend the same? On this proposed solution, what would be the new voltage drop? Is the calculated 4.59V drop of the first circuit unaffected? But there would be a heating effect caused by second circuit right? We know that Voltage Drop is directly proportional to Resistance (which is affected by the temperature).
Your experience and knowledge are appreciated.