Oversized Feeders and Associated Equipment Grounding Conductors

Location
USA
Occupation
PE
NEC 250.122(B): New for 2020 - If ungrounded conductors are increased in size.....wire-type equipment grounding conductors (EGC) shall be increased in size proportionally to the increase in circular mil area of the ungrounded conductors.

See calculation example in NEC Handbook.

Another example: 200A feeder, 250kcmil AL wire upsized to 900kcmil AL to compensate for voltage drop - normally the EGC would be #6CU, per NEC 250.122(A).
900000 / 250000 = 3.6; from Table 8 in Chapter 9, area of #6CU = 26240cmil, so the area of the upsized EGC = 3.6 * 26240 = 94464.
Upsized EGC = #1/0CU

Question: Suppose the distance is long enough to require a parallel 900AL feeder (2 sets), is this calculation based off the total area (1800kcmil) or the area of just one of the feeders (900kcmil)? It's a difference of #1/0CU EGC vs. #4/0CU EGC in each feeder.....and at the distances involved, that becomes very expensive quickly.
 

jaggedben

Senior Member
Location
Northern California
Occupation
Solar and Energy Storage Installer
...

Question: Suppose the distance is long enough to require a parallel 900AL feeder (2 sets), is this calculation based off the total area (1800kcmil) or the area of just one of the feeders (900kcmil)? It's a difference of #1/0CU EGC vs. #4/0CU EGC in each feeder.....and at the distances involved, that becomes very expensive quickly.

Based off the total area.

This is not new in the 2020 NEC. I think it just got renumbered.
 

infinity

Moderator
Staff member
Location
New Jersey
Occupation
Journeyman Electrician
Question: Suppose the distance is long enough to require a parallel 900AL feeder (2 sets), is this calculation based off the total area (1800kcmil) or the area of just one of the feeders (900kcmil)?
Since you have 2 sets of 900's you would use the combined size of 1800 kcmils to calculate the EGC size.
 

infinity

Moderator
Staff member
Location
New Jersey
Occupation
Journeyman Electrician
No offense to the OP, but I hear something like that and, unless it's a theoretical question, I question whether they know what they are doing. Perhaps the OP could supply more details such as voltage and length and we can offer some suggestions.
I know that some designers just look at the chart and pick a conductor size or they use a voltage drop calculator and it spits out 900 kcmil. For us we never install anything larger than 750's.
 
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