marcopoloc19
Member
Can someone explain this to me a little better? The way I understand it is that the motor requires a minimum conductor size of #10 when protected by a regular fuse or thermal breaker. When protected by the branch-circuit short-circuit and ground-fault protection you need to to multiply the FLA by a certain multiple and then do you use the correct ampacity for the wire according to the ampacity of the inverse time breaker?
With the following question. What size branch-circuit conductor does a 71/2-hp, 230V, 3? motor need if the conductor terminals are rated 60?C (Figure 430-5)?
(a) 14 AWG
(b) 12 AWG
(c) 10 AWG
(d) none of these
Answer: (c) 10 AWG
22A x 1.25 = 27.5A, 10 AWG, rated 30A at 60?C.
Size the branch-circuit short-circuit and ground-fault protection device per 240.6(A) and 430.52(C)(1) Ex. 1. For an inverse-time breaker: 22A x 2.5 = 55A, next size up = 60A.
With the following question. What size branch-circuit conductor does a 71/2-hp, 230V, 3? motor need if the conductor terminals are rated 60?C (Figure 430-5)?
(a) 14 AWG
(b) 12 AWG
(c) 10 AWG
(d) none of these
Answer: (c) 10 AWG
22A x 1.25 = 27.5A, 10 AWG, rated 30A at 60?C.
Size the branch-circuit short-circuit and ground-fault protection device per 240.6(A) and 430.52(C)(1) Ex. 1. For an inverse-time breaker: 22A x 2.5 = 55A, next size up = 60A.