millstrainer
Member
I can't find it in the NEC but someone was telling me that the maximum size Equipment Grounding Conductor for a feeder is 250 kcmil. Is this true or do you have to stick with what is in Tbl 250.122?
I used to do that all the time. It builds character.Originally posted by tonyi:
You could use 1200kcm (or larger) on an ordinary 15A residential branch circuit if you so desired.
Maybe I misunderstood the questionOriginally posted by tonyi:
250.122 is MINIMUMS. There is no maximum.
Yeah and how much copper you want to waste, not any need for a EGC larger than the circuit conductors.The only max limit is one of practicality in finding boxes, devices and other fittings with the capacity to handle it.
This may not always be true. Although 250.122 states "need not be larger than the circuit conductors," 110.10 requires the electrical circuit components be selected to permit the circuit protective devices to operate without damaging the circuit components.not any need for a EGC larger than the circuit conductors
Ditto, I agree. This would be a voltage drop problem, a design issue, which requires the circuit conductors and EGC to be increased in size.Originally posted by iwire:
If the run is so long that an EGC the same size as the circuit conductors would not operate the OCPD fast enough in response to a ground fault that would mean a short circuit would also not operate the OCPD fast enough
ekbrunn I am keeping an open mind but I still do not understand even for the above scenario why the grounding conductor would need to be larger than the circuit conductors.Originally posted by ekbrunn:
If the available fault current were extremely high and the circuit was small it is possible to damage the conductors before the operation of the OCPD. This damage would be in violation of 110.10. This would be the time the grounding conductor would need to be increased to facilitate that operation.