JohnE
Senior Member
- Location
- Milford, MA
One of my guys came in this morning and asked if I would "do the math" for conductor fill or use the tables in annex c. I told him that I'd do the math since I'm used to it and annex C wasn't always there, ( and also the preface to annex C stating that it is not part of this NFPA document), but why do you ask. He said that in a code class the previous evening, they had an example where doing the math for #14 THW resulted in 19.7 conductors being allowed in 1" SCH 80 PVC, but annex C shows only 13. I told him that can't be right. When I double checked, I found it to be true.
I ran 16 examples using #14 and #8 THW and THHN for 1" and 2" sch 80 pvc and emt. I found that every example using thhn correlated with annex C, but every example using THW was drastically different.
For example: #14 THW = .0139 sq. in. from table 5. 1" sch 80 = .275 sq. in @40% fill. So, .275/ .0139 = 19.7, so 19 conductors, no? Annex C (p. 698) shows 13 conductors.
I'd think I were doing something wrong, except his instructor came out with same values.
Maybe we are both doing something wrong.
Any Thoughts?
I ran 16 examples using #14 and #8 THW and THHN for 1" and 2" sch 80 pvc and emt. I found that every example using thhn correlated with annex C, but every example using THW was drastically different.
For example: #14 THW = .0139 sq. in. from table 5. 1" sch 80 = .275 sq. in @40% fill. So, .275/ .0139 = 19.7, so 19 conductors, no? Annex C (p. 698) shows 13 conductors.
I'd think I were doing something wrong, except his instructor came out with same values.
Maybe we are both doing something wrong.
Any Thoughts?