Say one house is wired code minium number of receptacles, but keeping with your receptacle limit.YES - IMO
The residential no-holds-barred approach is out-dated, and IMO dangerous. (cut)
rockyd said:Resi 3va per square...[/quite]
is needed.
cf
As for Resi.... It doesn't and thats the point. Sure the code being written as a minimum - Good practice - hell no... Allowed by code - sure it is. Should it be? IMO - NO! You could go to many homes today and find that a certain percentage have that one or two circuits that trip due to over-load. Most of them were wired by people who took no common sense in the circuit design because they are not required to. Or they were wired for the appliances and uses of the day the were wired - in say 1930.... One outlet per room, all from the same lighting and outlet branch. Sure they worked great in 1930 - but people are using and will continue to use more. And the day the OCP fails - they call the cause of the fire "electrical in nature".Where does the code say that?
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Is it good practice, no.
Is it allowed by code, yes.
Some consideration should be taken in designing circuits if the NEC as a minimum is not mandating it - you should pick a number.... Based on your gut feeling.....A "home office" would need a few circuits, a hallway is only going to need a GP from someplace else...
You don't see that as the same thing???? If you give 'em outlets - they will use them.... Get 4 kids together with gift cards from Best Buy and look what they come home with. If all four of those kids room were on the same circuit as allowed, along with the living room, and the den, and the hall, and the master bed room, and the rest of it. The code doesn't mandate that you use any sense whatsoever in the design - and I think that it is a problem. Especially since it has been some time now that I have done a home that was 3va per sq' with NOTHING plugged in at all.....My translation of your issue is, 'Not enough circuits', not necessarily, 'Too many receptacles per circuit'.
cf
You don't see that as the same thing???? If you give 'em outlets - they will use them.... Get 4 kids together with gift cards from Best Buy and look what they come home with. If all four of those kids room were on the same circuit as allowed, along with the living room, and the den, and the hall, and the master bed room, and the rest of it. The code doesn't mandate that you use any sense whatsoever in the design - and I think that it is a problem. Especially since it has been some time now that I have done a home that was 3va per sq' with NOTHING plugged in at all.....
All the "properly installed" in the world won't eliminate capacitance.Properly installed wiring will have no leakage current no matter how long the runs are.
Considering what I just wrote - apparently not.You don't see that as the same thing???? (cut).
Again, considering what I just wrote: No, I think they will plug-in what ever they will, no matter the number of receptacles.(cut)If you give 'em outlets - they will use them...(cut)
Yes that's true - 90.1.B(cut)The code doesn't mandate that you use any sense whatsoever in the design (cut)
And I agree with you. But it is still a design issue, not a code issue.(cut)and I think that it is a problem. (cut)
Properly installed wiring will have no leakage current no matter how long the runs are.
If you self-impose a limit to the number of outlets to some realistic number - it would matter less than just short of the whole house on one circuit - as is allowed now. IMO the code not mandating some common sense design as they do in commecial (Which I stated is a little low) is a problem with the code - and should be updated.Again, considering what I just wrote: No, I think they will plug-in what ever they will, no matter the number of receptacles.
And I agree with you. But it is still a design issue, not a code issue.
cf
It's been my experience that a breaker that has tripped that many times tends to be more sensitive than stubborn....Sure - Yes - I have a feeling you're going to say that the OCP will operate for sure... That you can trust a breaker will limit the current on the circuit after the 50th time it tripped?
Some yes - some not. Point being I'm sure the trip curve changes...It's been my experience that a breaker that has tripped that many times tends to be more sensitive than stubborn....
More nuisance trips than actual overloads! :grin:
There are absolutely no published values for adjusting the trip curves of breakers based on operation. The bi-metal in breakers do not flex far enough to be damaged by multiple operations, just like the ones in thermostats don't change after a couple of days in operation. It is possible for the latching mechanism to wear out which is why they may appear to become more sensitive.Some yes - some not. Point being I'm sure the trip curve changes...
In general most OCPDs, fuses and breakers, will carry 133% for an extremely long period of time. If the ambient air around an OCPD stays below 40?C (104?F) they will take an even longer time to trip.
You don't see that as the same thing????