to be oversized, or not to be....
to be oversized, or not to be....
You point out an interesting, but unlikely, case, since POCO generally will discourage residential installations that are larger than 10kW or overshoot normal consumption by more than about 10%.
But it does bring to mind that POCO will have sized their conductors for the expected load rather than for the full nominal size of the service the customer has.
Thanks!
There can also be an issue of which conductors belong to whom.
In the rough diagram below, adding the j-box changes the ownership somehow, doesn't it?
If the C switch and D panel are called "service disconnects" by the POCO, what conductors are theirs in the diagram?
I know if you are required to put a switch at X, you have to label it NOT SERVICE EQUIPMENT.
My question is, when will the solar produce 200A when the max output of the inverter would be 160A? And if 2/0 THHN at 75°C is rated at 175A is there really an issue?
By NEC and sizing conductors at 125% for continuous loads I would say you would not be allowed to put 200A of solar OCPD's in your example, only 175A.
I agree with you, that the 83% rule does not make sense to me. I think a conductor ampacity rating should be what it is whether service or branch circuit, continuous or non-continuous load.
It'll never produce 200A, and I think really only produce 160A for very few hours per year, *depending* on where it is.
As in, a 10kW AC inverter only makes the full 10kW on say a few hundred hours per year in New England, while New Mexico would be totally different. Or adding tracking in New England would make a big difference.
Anyhow, when this is OK:
90A worth of OCPD associated with the PV. So really 65A operating. It uses #3 Cu conductors, which make a feeder tap from full service feeder conductors that I anticipate are either #2/0Cu or #4/0AL.
You'd think:
1. a 175 A, 2/0 wire (service/for loads) associated with a 200A PV breaker/160A of power (as the OP proposes) would be fine, seeing as...
2. the same 175A, 2/0 is fine when associated with a 90A breaker and 3 AWG.
Something very weird would have to happen for the 2/0 wire to receive 200A (in #1) when the 3 AWG will never get 175A (in #2).
If there was some sort of problem created for the 2/0 wire by a 200A PV breaker in the #1 setup, seems it would also exist for the #3 wire/90A breaker in #2, but the latter is allowed.
If the #3 is exposed to a 175A breaker, why can't the 2/0 be exposed to 200A breaker?
I agree with your bolded comment too, but it's still odd that you "can't" do something which seems perfectly ok.
Also, upgrading from 2/0 to 3/0 service wire so you *could* go with the full 160A of PV could be quite simple...or a huge headache, right?
