- Location
- Illinois
- Occupation
- retired electrician
Adrian,
Sorry the code references are in Article 240.
I have never said that you use the rated load current to size the conductors. When the nameplate has a "minimun circuit ampacity" shown, that is not the rated load current, it is the branch circuit selection current.
However this has nothing to with the sizing of the branch circuit short circuit and ground fault protective device. 440.22 says that the protective device can be rated at 175% of the branch circuit selection current. In your example of a 30 amp branch circuit selection current the conductor could be a #10 and the OCPD could be 50 amps and if the unit would not start using the 50 amp breaker you could increase the breaker to 60 amps still using the #10 wire.
Don
Sorry the code references are in Article 240.
I have never said that you use the rated load current to size the conductors. When the nameplate has a "minimun circuit ampacity" shown, that is not the rated load current, it is the branch circuit selection current.
However this has nothing to with the sizing of the branch circuit short circuit and ground fault protective device. 440.22 says that the protective device can be rated at 175% of the branch circuit selection current. In your example of a 30 amp branch circuit selection current the conductor could be a #10 and the OCPD could be 50 amps and if the unit would not start using the 50 amp breaker you could increase the breaker to 60 amps still using the #10 wire.
Don