FionaZuppa
Senior Member
- Location
- AZ
- Occupation
- Part Time Electrician (semi retired, old) - EE retired.
My understanding is the NEC lets you do load calcs without the nameplate known, but I am still unsure how the neutral factors into that.
so how would you apply this, kinda says you need to know the max load to be served, yes? which isn't really an issue if you size (minimum ampacity) all the CCC's to the max amp rating of the receptacle. if its a 30A recept then wire it with #10 for all CCC's.
(b) The minimum branch-circuit conductor size shall have an allowable ampacity not less than the maximum load to be served after the application of any adjustment or correction factors.
oddly, the 80% rule (125% from the other way) means a 30A OCPD is no good for a GE electric dryer that is plated 25A, yet the install instructions say to use 30A ckt.
but let me ask a more fundamental Q. why pull a #12 CCC ? is the conduit fill an issue? if it were a $$ thing because the project was 20k feet of white wire, then pull #10 white and #12 green <-- which works out to the same $$ btw (20k feet of #10green + 20k feet of #12white = 20k feet of #10white + 20k feet of #12green).
we know these common appliances dont use that much amps on the 120 side, but that doesnt mean an appliance (device, whatever) cant use say 21A on the 120 side.
Last edited: