74sparks
Member
- Location
- Pennsylvania
- Occupation
- Electrical Engineer
Laying out electric for a semi-inground pool, essentially an above ground pool product designed for partial excavation into hillsides, etc. Installation includes variable speed internally-protected filter pump (99-253V, 13.0-11.5A) and heat pump heater. All runs from breaker panel in basement of house to pool are roughly 98 feet length.
I had planned for two circuits:
1. 240V / 30A GFCI breaker to AWG-10/2+G dedicated for heat pump Will have outdoor disconnect located near heater, approximately 6 feet from water.
2. 240V / 20A GFCI breaker to AWG-12/3+G for filter pump & accessory outlets. Will have outdoor disconnect located near pump, approximately 6 feet from water, downstream of accessory outlets but before pump load. Pump is to be wired 240V, with each accessory outlet using one hot + neutral, all standard multiwire branch circuit stuff per NEC 210.4.
But pump manufacturer has some unusual language in their manual, which seems to be based on their misunderstanding of how a multibranch circuit actually works, or perhaps certain older GFCI breakers that can't handle 120V and 240V combined loads. Here's what their manual states:
7. If AC power is supplied by a GFCI circuit breaker, use a dedicated circuit breaker that has no other electrical loads.
8. Connect the pump permanently to a circuit. Make sure no other lights or appliances are on the same circuit.
Wondering now if I should just pull an additional circuit to the back yard for the accessory receptacles, or continue as planned, with the pump and accessory receptacles on the same circuit. The pump manufacturer's advice doesn't seem to be supported by anything I can find in the code, in fact these things are usually plugged into a branch circuit with a twist lock rather than hardwired. Also, with this panel now at capacity (thanks to 4 poles of new GFCI breakers) and the wiring already pulled from the basement to back yard, reconfiguring isn't completely trivial.
Advice?
I had planned for two circuits:
1. 240V / 30A GFCI breaker to AWG-10/2+G dedicated for heat pump Will have outdoor disconnect located near heater, approximately 6 feet from water.
2. 240V / 20A GFCI breaker to AWG-12/3+G for filter pump & accessory outlets. Will have outdoor disconnect located near pump, approximately 6 feet from water, downstream of accessory outlets but before pump load. Pump is to be wired 240V, with each accessory outlet using one hot + neutral, all standard multiwire branch circuit stuff per NEC 210.4.
But pump manufacturer has some unusual language in their manual, which seems to be based on their misunderstanding of how a multibranch circuit actually works, or perhaps certain older GFCI breakers that can't handle 120V and 240V combined loads. Here's what their manual states:
7. If AC power is supplied by a GFCI circuit breaker, use a dedicated circuit breaker that has no other electrical loads.
8. Connect the pump permanently to a circuit. Make sure no other lights or appliances are on the same circuit.
Wondering now if I should just pull an additional circuit to the back yard for the accessory receptacles, or continue as planned, with the pump and accessory receptacles on the same circuit. The pump manufacturer's advice doesn't seem to be supported by anything I can find in the code, in fact these things are usually plugged into a branch circuit with a twist lock rather than hardwired. Also, with this panel now at capacity (thanks to 4 poles of new GFCI breakers) and the wiring already pulled from the basement to back yard, reconfiguring isn't completely trivial.
Advice?