How specific is the requirement for parallel conductors to be the same length or is to be taken to be taken literally. 500 KCMIL has a resistance of .000027 ohms per foot. At this level assuming 240 volts the conductors would have to be 50 feet different in length to make a difference of only 1 amp between them. Making up a main with lots of parallel conductors is sloppy if they have to be exactly the same length.
Not exactly. It is an algebra problem. And yes, I know what the code says.
For two parallel conductors, 1% different in length, they share with about .5% difference in current.
For 10% difference in length, they share with about 5% difference in current.
So, how close do you have to have the length? Well I say close enough in length the difference in current does not push the higher current (shorter) one above its ampacity. So:
1.how much headroom - calculated load to conductor ampacity (percent)?
2. what is the percent difference in length?
Without going into the calcs
500kcmil Cu, 2 parallel, loaded to 750A. Ampacity for parallel 500 is 2 x 380 = 760A. As designed, these cables are loaded at 98.7% of NEC ampacity.
Example 1:
100 foot pull. After termination there is a 1 foot difference in the cut-off pieces - 1% difference in length. The conductors will share at 50.25% and 49.75% (not exactly, but close enough for this example). So, the short one will have 377A and the long one will have 373A. The short one is loaded to 99.2% of ampacity. Meets Code.
Example 2:
Pull is between two adjacent swirchboards and is only 10 feet long. Same as before, cut off the same length, pull in, terminate, the cutoff pieces for phase A are again 1 foot shorter. The difference in length is 10%, so the conductors will share at 52.5% and 47.5% (again not exactly, but close enough). The short one will have 394A. The long one 356A. Oops
Morals of the story:
1. Keep the Ampacity headroom (percent) more than the difference in length (percent) and you are at least 2X to the good.
2. Probably the only time it will matter is if the each phase is in a separate conduit. Makes the terminations look nice, but one has to make sure the conduits are sufficiently close in length.
So sayeth the worm