Good answer tyThis is my possibly failed logic for the maximum permitted length of a raceway without an expansion fitting.
Example:
Two exterior enclosures with concentric KO's with a straight run of PVC in between. The length of the PVC is limited by the NEC because the expansion or contraction of the PVC over 1/4" can damage the enclosures.
100° temperature change so we'll use the maximum length of PVC without an expansion fitting of 7' as Augie stated.
7' of PVC installed when it's 0° F, expands 1/4" when 100° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
7' of PVC installed when it's 100° F, contracts 1/4" when 0° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
7' of PVC installed when it's 50° F, expands 1/8" when 100° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
7' of PVC installed when it's 50° F, contracts 1/8" when it's 0° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
14' of PVC installed when it's 50° F, expands 1/4" when 100° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
14' of PVC installed when it's 50° F, contracts 1/4" when it's 0° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
This is my possibly failed logic for the maximum permitted length of a raceway without an expansion fitting.
Example:
Two exterior enclosures with concentric KO's with a straight run of PVC in between. The length of the PVC is limited by the NEC because the expansion or contraction of the PVC over 1/4" can damage the enclosures.
100° temperature change so we'll use the maximum length of PVC without an expansion fitting of 7' as Augie stated.
7' of PVC installed when it's 0° F, expands 1/4" when 100° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
7' of PVC installed when it's 100° F, contracts 1/4" when 0° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
7' of PVC installed when it's 50° F, expands 1/8" when 100° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
7' of PVC installed when it's 50° F, contracts 1/8" when it's 0° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
14' of PVC installed when it's 50° F, expands 1/4" when 100° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
14' of PVC installed when it's 50° F, contracts 1/4" when it's 0° F. Everything good no damage to enclosures.
TyAugie said any run more than 7' so that would include the two runs at the top along the peak and the run to the right where the two LB's are.
In almost all cases, I have only needed on fitting in a straight runs, however, I did a greenhouse and found the need of 2 in a single run. I had to argue with the installing "electricians" to even needing any, since the concept eludes most hack electricians.I was at a high school softball field that had a PVC run from the dugout along the top of the fence to the outfield. I don’t know what it was used for, but on a hot summer day, it looked like strand of cooked spaghetti. No expansion joints.
What makes you think this is any less arbitrary than many other code sections? And I don't know that it is specifically "damage" to enclosures as the popping out or straps, pulling the wire, etc. Remember, we could be talking 2" or more of expansion on longer runs.This is my possibly failed logic for the maximum permitted length of a raceway without an expansion fitting.
Example:
Two exterior enclosures with concentric KO's with a straight run of PVC in between. The length of the PVC is limited by the NEC because the expansion or contraction of the PVC over 1/4" can damage the enclosures.
The box damage scenario is just one example as it was a non-exhaustive list. The fact is that for some reason it was decided that the PVC raceway installation can handle 1/4" of expansion or contraction without damaging the system. My issue is with how that 1/4" calculated as demonstrated by my example.And I don't know that it is specifically "damage" to enclosures as the popping out or straps, pulling the wire, etc. Remember, we could be talking 2" or more of expansion on longer runs.
few minutes is probably fine? how long does it take it to cool down when you heat it for bending reasons?if I pull a pipe out of a cold shop then install outdoors in warm weather how long does it take that pipe to accumulate- problem long after I am done— the. What temp do I go with?…
Or the opposite- guess we have tk heat scan the pipe before install and right on each pipe- lol
The NEC never addresses this issue. The manufacturers selection charts only show the full range of minimum to maximum.It isn't clear if that length change is _total_ (minimum expected temperature to maximum expected temperature) or _relative_ to the temperature at installation.
You don't get situations of uninsulated/unconditioned buildings and high temperature especially near ceiling level on a sunny day?I was just stating whatever government body picks it temperature because of the ambient temperature does not mean the pipe is that so there’s gonna be a change in shrinkage or gain from the pipe to the temperature outside I was just pointing out the hypocrisy I live in such a mile climate we never use expansion points..,
I’ve been coming to the conclusion that this NEC book is like 10% safety and the rest of is garbage design issue “” not life safety
If you have long expansion fitting and only 1" of calculated change in length, you have some room to play with and wouldn't necessarily have to install at mid range of the fitting.The temperature at the time of installation only applies to where to set the expansion joint. Lets say your your temp range is 0deg-100deg and you install at 50 deg.
So the expansion is calculated at a 100deg change in temp. You install at 50 deg which is half way of the expansion range. So if the total expansion is 1" and you install at 50 deg the joint has to move 1/2" in either direction
What about elbows? The actual code wording says elbows so even if those are 45° bends they're still elbows unless the requirement is only for when an elbow is 90°. Unfortunately it doesn't say anything about the amount of bend.I only see the need for one expansion fitting. It would be between the disconnect and the roof line. All the rest are not fixed points. Unless the drawing is wrong, and the conduit on the side, near the soffit, is up against the soffit, then one would be needed from the soffit down to the LB.
352.44 Expansion Fittings.
Expansion fittings for PVC conduit shall be provided to compensate for thermal expansion and contraction where the length change, in accordance with Table 352.44, is expected to be 6 mm (1∕ 4 in.) or greater in a straight run between securely mounted items such as boxes, cabinets, elbows, or other conduit terminations.
I don't see an elbow as a fixed point. I see it says "elbow", but logically it will give enough to not cause a problem. The elbow, or bend, at the peak of the gable will not be tight against the peak, as you can't get that tight of a bend without pinching the conduit.What about elbows? The actual code wording says elbows so even if those are 45° bends they're still elbows unless the requirement is only for when an elbow is 90°. Unfortunately it doesn't say anything about the amount of bend.
For 100F delta T, I get 7' as the minimum length where an expansion fitting is required, and 6' as the maximum length without one. The PVC expansion factor of 3.38E-5 / F with 100 degrees F means we get to 0.25" at a length of 0.25 / 3.38E-5 / 100 = 74".100° temperature change so we'll use the maximum length of PVC without an expansion fitting of 7' as Augie stated.
I would say the code language quoted above is telling us to consider elbows as fixed points.I don't see an elbow as a fixed point. I see it says "elbow", but logically it will give enough to not cause a problem.
As an electrician that doesn't do residential and wouldn't install PVC more than a short stub up or between panels, I will snobbily say, regardless of the code, there is also what it will look like when you drive by it in a couple years. more expension fittings means less snag and a better looking installation.I don't see an elbow as a fixed point. I see it says "elbow", but logically it will give enough to not cause a problem. The elbow, or bend, at the peak of the gable will not be tight against the peak, as you can't get that tight of a bend without pinching the conduit.
IMO, whoever on the code making panel that wrote this section has never installed one stick of PVC.