New York City amends the 2005 code with:
"Subsection 210.11(C)(4) - Add a new subsection 210.11(C)(4) to read as follows:
(4) Air-Conditioning Branch Circuit. In addition to the number of branch circuits required by other parts of this section, an individual branch circuit shall be provided for each air-conditioning receptacle required by 210.52(I)."
This requirement dates back to prior to New York City's adoption of the NEC, though I don't know if the "individual branch circuit" wording was in the old NYC code. I've seen these wired as MWBC with a shared neutral on 12/3 BX from the panel to the first A/C outlet at the perimeter of the building literally hundreds of times. Obviously the current on the neutral won't exceed 20A (assume typical NYC 2-phase apartment wiring) so this is certainly safe.
I'm told inspectors are starting to reject these even in modifications to existing work (e.g. where a 2-pole AFCI breaker turns out to be required in a new panel) because a MWBC doesn't fall under the definition of "individual branch circuit". I can see the point. And I assume it's possible, even likely (since 120/208 is so common here) that the drafters of the NYC amendments wanted to avoid 20A on the BX armor due to a bad neutral splice at the first J-box or receptacle... but, in practice, what a pain.
The cheapest general fix seems like it might be a subpanel fed by the original 12-3. But where there are, say, 8 existing air conditioners in a large apartment, and this objection comes up -- oof. 4 new 2-space panels.
Opinions?
"Subsection 210.11(C)(4) - Add a new subsection 210.11(C)(4) to read as follows:
(4) Air-Conditioning Branch Circuit. In addition to the number of branch circuits required by other parts of this section, an individual branch circuit shall be provided for each air-conditioning receptacle required by 210.52(I)."
This requirement dates back to prior to New York City's adoption of the NEC, though I don't know if the "individual branch circuit" wording was in the old NYC code. I've seen these wired as MWBC with a shared neutral on 12/3 BX from the panel to the first A/C outlet at the perimeter of the building literally hundreds of times. Obviously the current on the neutral won't exceed 20A (assume typical NYC 2-phase apartment wiring) so this is certainly safe.
I'm told inspectors are starting to reject these even in modifications to existing work (e.g. where a 2-pole AFCI breaker turns out to be required in a new panel) because a MWBC doesn't fall under the definition of "individual branch circuit". I can see the point. And I assume it's possible, even likely (since 120/208 is so common here) that the drafters of the NYC amendments wanted to avoid 20A on the BX armor due to a bad neutral splice at the first J-box or receptacle... but, in practice, what a pain.
The cheapest general fix seems like it might be a subpanel fed by the original 12-3. But where there are, say, 8 existing air conditioners in a large apartment, and this objection comes up -- oof. 4 new 2-space panels.
Opinions?