parallel feeders in one conduit

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ashtrak

Senior Member
Location
Maryland
Could someone tell me if there is a problem with pulling parallel feeders in ONE conduit.
I've got Eight 3/0's (two blacks /two reds/ two blues and two neautrals 120/208 3phase) in an 3-1/2 in conduit.I was told that someone at a code class said this was discussed and derateing would come in to effect. I can't understand the reasoning behind that as the parallel conductors are electrically the same conductor.
I can't find any thing in the code book that says the conductors would require two conduits.

Thanks
 

petersonra

Senior Member
Location
Northern illinois
Occupation
engineer
Could someone tell me if there is a problem with pulling parallel feeders in ONE conduit.
I've got Eight 3/0's (two blacks /two reds/ two blues and two neautrals 120/208 3phase) in an 3-1/2 in conduit.I was told that someone at a code class said this was discussed and derateing would come in to effect. I can't understand the reasoning behind that as the parallel conductors are electrically the same conductor.
I can't find any thing in the code book that says the conductors would require two conduits.

Thanks
2 conduits is not required, but you do have to derate if more than 3 CCC. It may be more cost effective to use multiple conduits.
 

infinity

Moderator
Staff member
Location
New Jersey
Occupation
Journeyman Electrician
So if your #3/0's are copper and have 90 degree insulation and your neutrals are not CCC's then you would end up with:

225 * 2 * 80%= 360 amps

If your connected load is 360 amps or less then you cold go up to the next standard size 400 amps.
 

charlie b

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Lockport, IL
Occupation
Semi-Retired Electrical Engineer
I can't understand the reasoning behind that as the parallel conductors are electrically the same conductor.
Electrically, referring to the carrying of current, yes they are essentially the same conductor. But thermally, referring to the generation of heat, they are not. You have six conductors that are each creating heat around themselves, as opposed to having only three conductors generating heat in one conduit, and three others generating heat in a separate conduit.

 
Electrically, referring to the carrying of current, yes they are essentially the same conductor. But thermally, referring to the generation of heat, they are not. You have six conductors that are each creating heat around themselves, as opposed to having only three conductors generating heat in one conduit, and three others generating heat in a separate conduit.


Charlie
This is a very good explanation. I am going to "borrow" it from you. ;)
 

ashtrak

Senior Member
Location
Maryland
Thank you

Thank you

Thanks Charlie and all who replied.
My main breaker is a 400 and my connected load isn't such that I couldn't derate and still be Ok.
I do realize that I must derate for more than three ccc's, but I didn't think my parallel feeders qualified as more than one each.
I would think there would be less heat with the two conductors, but what Charlie said makes sense,heat is now being disipated from more total area around the two conductors.

Thank you all again for the informitive response
 

roger

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Fl
Occupation
Retired Electrician
Please correct me where I am wrong.......I thought that neutrals are considered CCC's unless you could prove that all 3 phase conductors are perfectly balanced. That never is the case and those Neutrals are considered CCC's.

That is not the case.

A neutral conductor of a MWBC in a single phase service would not be considered a CCC.

This would also be true of the grounded conductor in a center grounded Delta MWBC.

It would also be true in a 4 wire MWBC of a Wye service where the loads are mostly non-linear (and even in most that are linear)

Where only two phases of a Wye are used in a MWBC the neutral conductor would be a CCC and the grounded conductor is always a CCC in a two wire circuit.

In reality a neutral conductor almost never needs to be counted as a CCC regardless of the circuits loading


Roger
 
Last edited:

LarryFine

Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
Location
Henrico County, VA
Occupation
Electrical Contractor
Please correct me where I am wrong.......I thought that neutrals are considered CCC's unless you could prove that all 3 phase conductors are perfectly balanced. That never is the case and those Neutrals are considered CCC's.
Nope. Any current in the neutral must be current that is not being carried by a line conductor. There can never be more than three conductors' worth of current.
 

winnie

Senior Member
Location
Springfield, MA, USA
Occupation
Electric motor research
Please correct me where I am wrong.......I thought that neutrals are considered CCC's unless you could prove that all 3 phase conductors are perfectly balanced. That never is the case and those Neutrals are considered CCC's.

Keep in mind that we are not talking reality, we are talking about counting for the purpose of applying code. If the phase conductors are not perfectly balanced, then there will be _some_ current flowing on that neutral.

Derating for number of conductors bundled together is because of heating. As LarryFine notes, in the systems where you don't have to count the neutral as a CCC, whenever you do have some current on the neutral, you have less current some place else. The net result is less total heating for the entire bundle, and thus for purposes of heat generation you have fewer effective CCCs than actual conductors with current on them.

-Jon
 

sameguy

Senior Member
Location
New York
Occupation
Master Elec./JW retired
75 deg. terms?
both runs the same length?
A=A,B=B,C=C, must be the same respectivly or one pipe set will pull more than the other.
code book is at the shop.
400a=600mcm yes?
 

Mr. Wizard

Senior Member
Location
Texas
Could someone tell me if there is a problem with pulling parallel feeders in ONE conduit.
I've got Eight 3/0's (two blacks /two reds/ two blues and two neautrals 120/208 3phase) in an 3-1/2 in conduit.I was told that someone at a code class said this was discussed and derateing would come in to effect. I can't understand the reasoning behind that as the parallel conductors are electrically the same conductor.
I can't find any thing in the code book that says the conductors would require two conduits.

Thanks

I had a very similar situation last week. My application was 400 amp, single phase, and I ran 2-two inch rmc's for my risers, and installed 3- 3/0's in each. Overall cost for two seperate conduits was cheaper, and easier than one larger conduit. And yes, as mentioned by others, derating does apply :)
 
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