In sizing up a cable for current carrying capacity, the terminals temperature need to be taken into account per NEC. But there is no mention of termination temperature in IEC. Why this discrepancy?
Thanks.
Thanks, Dennis. Will you please expand on that by giving examples: cable size prior to the clarification and the same after the clarification for, interestingly, the cable size based on IEC or NEC works out to be the same and I want to know how?I do know that the Canadian Electrical Code has just recently clarified their code to include the temperature rating of the lugs. .
I do not know if it is correct to choose the size of cable exactly equal to the load current. In the cable sizer program of the previous post, the program chooses at least the next higher size of the cable in such cases............Let's take a lug that is rated for a 1/0 wire at 75C. Looking at a 1/0 rated 90C--Based on the NEC T. 310.15(B)(16)-- the wire is rated 170 amps at 90C but only 150 amp at 75C. If the conductor was loaded to its max then there would be a considerable amount of heat being transferred to the terminal. That extra heat could cause a failure in the termination.
As long as the load is not continuous then I can use a wire with an ampacity of 100 amps to feed a 100 amp load. If the load is continuous I must multiply the amps by 125%. Of course when we look for the wire that is appropriate for the job we use T. 310.15(B)(16). No calculations necessary. The NEC may not have the same values as the Canadian Electrical Code or the IEC. I did notice that the 2011 NEC changed the value of some of the wire ampacities in the table.I do not know if it is correct to choose the size of cable exactly equal to the load current. In the cable sizer program of the previous post, the program chooses at least the next higher size of the cable in such cases............
Dennis, I am afraid that data on terminal temperature is superfluous, because in the following link no such data were used for cable sizing and I do not know what is wrong in it.
http://www.cablesizer.com/?new_cable=Go