jcarter052496
Member
- Location
- St. Louis, MO
Best Design Practice
Best Design Practice
For typical 20A/1P circuits, we show 4 circuits per homerun (4 hots, 2 neutrals, 6 current carrying conductors per code) fed from 20A/1P circuit breakers.
Per NEC 2008 210.4B, we are going to change to 3 circuits per homerun and add a note to provide 3-pole handle ties.
This tie will allow a single pole breaker to trip and be reset without affecting it's adjacent, tied breaker, right?
Also, I assume this is the best design practice, but would like comments.
Another option is to ONLY allow single pole homeruns (imagine 42 MC or AC cables coming out of 1 panel, yuck!).
Or show 3-pole breakers where 1 short or overcurrent event will affect 6 offices, instead of 2 offices. This would be unacceptable to my clients.
Again, any comments would be appreciated.
Best Design Practice
For typical 20A/1P circuits, we show 4 circuits per homerun (4 hots, 2 neutrals, 6 current carrying conductors per code) fed from 20A/1P circuit breakers.
Per NEC 2008 210.4B, we are going to change to 3 circuits per homerun and add a note to provide 3-pole handle ties.
This tie will allow a single pole breaker to trip and be reset without affecting it's adjacent, tied breaker, right?
Also, I assume this is the best design practice, but would like comments.
Another option is to ONLY allow single pole homeruns (imagine 42 MC or AC cables coming out of 1 panel, yuck!).
Or show 3-pole breakers where 1 short or overcurrent event will affect 6 offices, instead of 2 offices. This would be unacceptable to my clients.
Again, any comments would be appreciated.