Hot carrying unbalanced currant

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JerL

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Recently I was installing heat tape. The voltage was 208, and I needed 2 circuits. After I pulled in 4 phases I got to wondering if I could have used Three Phases, one to carry the unbalanced load, in the same manner as a multiwire circuit using a phase instead of a neutral. Does the NEC address this situation at all?
 
Let's assume that a heat tape circuit draws 12 amps at 208 volts. Assuming single phase-- each leg draws 6 amps. Thus if you hooked one circuit to AB phase and the other to BC phase then the load would be Phase A= 6 amps, Phase B =12 amps and Phase C= 6 amps.
This certainly would work but you would have to make sure you don't overload one phase.
 
Recently I was installing heat tape. The voltage was 208, and I needed 2 circuits. After I pulled in 4 phases I got to wondering if I could have used Three Phases, one to carry the unbalanced load, in the same manner as a multiwire circuit using a phase instead of a neutral. Does the NEC address this situation at all?

You did not pull in 4 phases.
Although you did pull in 4 phase conductors. This is a very critical difference. If you pulled 2 conductors on L1 and 2 conductors on L2, you only have 1 phase voltage (L1-L2) even though you have four phase conductors. If you pulled 1 conductor on L1, 1 conductor on L2, and 2 conductors on L3, you have 3 phase voltages and 4 phase conductors.
 
The simple answer to the OP's question is yes. You'd need a 3p breaker instead of two 2p's.

Thus if you hooked one circuit to AB phase and the other to BC phase then the load would be Phase A= 6 amps, Phase B =12 amps and Phase C= 6 amps.
If I'm not mistaken, the current on the shared conductor would be somewhat lower than 12a.
 
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