HVAC wire sizing question

Location
Washington
Occupation
Electrician 01
I have RTU that has a rating of 52 amps with an MCA of 52 amps. Going by the code it looks like I can use #6 thhn dual rated because the 75 degree rating is 65 amps and for a continuous load of 52 amps it meets the 80% correction factor. Is there something I am missing or does this work out just perfectly?
 
Sorry the MCA is 65 amps
You'll need a conductor with a minimum ampacity of 65 amps. What is the wiring method? If it's conduit and wire or MC cable you can use #6 which has a 75° C rating of 65 amps. NM cable (60° C) would require #4 AWG conductors.
 
I have RTU that has a rating of 52 amps with an MCA of 52 amps. Going by the code it looks like I can use #6 thhn dual rated because the 75 degree rating is 65 amps and for a continuous load of 52 amps it meets the 80% correction factor. Is there something I am missing or does this work out just perfectly?
What do you mean by the 80% correction factor?
 
I have RTU that has a rating of 52 amps with an MCA of 52 amps. Going by the code it looks like I can use #6 thhn dual rated because the 75 degree rating is 65 amps and for a continuous load of 52 amps it meets the 80% correction factor. Is there something I am missing or does this work out just perfectly?
The 65 amps mca has already calculated the 125% factor for the a/c unit. 52 amps x 1.25 = 65 amps. If the unit states 52 amps mca then you do not multiply by 125%. I am assuming the mca stated on the unit is 65 amps so your wire should match that based on either 60C or 75C depending on your wiring method.
 
I have RTU that has a rating of 52 amps with an MCA of 52 amps. Going by the code it looks like I can use #6 thhn dual rated because the 75 degree rating is 65 amps and for a continuous load of 52 amps it meets the 80% correction factor. Is there something I am missing or does this work out just perfectly?
What is the MOCP listed on the nameplate on the unit?
 
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