Jpflex
Electrician big leagues
- Location
- Victorville
- Occupation
- Electrician commercial and residential
I have 10 lights going up at a job sight will be replacing old cloth type wiring without a ground conductor.
The lamp holders look pretty large such as moguls style. I was thinking of going with #10 wire (may seem over kill Larger than necessary ) but I do not know how much lumens brightness job will want Out of each lamp so I figure after computations and correction factor adjustments I’ll have around 2 amps per receptacle/lamps
Figured math as follows
1.25 percent (continuous load) multiplied by X (number of amperes for 1 light) multiplied by 10 lights = 30 amperes conductor or #10 AWG conductor THHN THHN2 chosen to use (60 degree column of table 310.21)
solving for X unknown usable amperes per light Will result in 2.4 amperes per light Or a total of 24 amperes for entire circuit thus allowing the conductors to be 1.25 % of load amperes. 24i/30i = 80%
However with temperature Correction we lower circuit ampacity 24 amperes again by 0.87% (for copper.net ambient temperature table for 105-113 degrees in my area) Which drops conductors to 20.88 amperes
Finally according to NEC 240.6A table this is not a standard size breaker so you move up to next larger size at 25 amperes
Does this sound correct?
THHM wires are rated for 90 degrees but were referenced at the ampacity of 60 degree column in nec book
The lamp holders look pretty large such as moguls style. I was thinking of going with #10 wire (may seem over kill Larger than necessary ) but I do not know how much lumens brightness job will want Out of each lamp so I figure after computations and correction factor adjustments I’ll have around 2 amps per receptacle/lamps
Figured math as follows
1.25 percent (continuous load) multiplied by X (number of amperes for 1 light) multiplied by 10 lights = 30 amperes conductor or #10 AWG conductor THHN THHN2 chosen to use (60 degree column of table 310.21)
solving for X unknown usable amperes per light Will result in 2.4 amperes per light Or a total of 24 amperes for entire circuit thus allowing the conductors to be 1.25 % of load amperes. 24i/30i = 80%
However with temperature Correction we lower circuit ampacity 24 amperes again by 0.87% (for copper.net ambient temperature table for 105-113 degrees in my area) Which drops conductors to 20.88 amperes
Finally according to NEC 240.6A table this is not a standard size breaker so you move up to next larger size at 25 amperes
Does this sound correct?
THHM wires are rated for 90 degrees but were referenced at the ampacity of 60 degree column in nec book