That paper claims that if the termination rating is 75C, you have to use a conductor with at least 75C rated insulation.
That makes no sense to me, as if you use a conductor at its 60C ampacity, its temperature due to resistive heating should not exceed 60C, which is less the 75C termination rating.
Is equipment with 75C rated terminations really going to product enough heat that combined with the conductor resistive heating the temperature at the termination will exceed 60C, for a conductor used at its 60C ampacity?
Cheers,
Wayne
That's an interesting point, and I think it might explain why I often see terminals rated for "60C / 75C". I thought that the dual rating was redundant, because the 75C would cover you in both cases. Guess not.
In all other cases, it's all a matter of identifying the weakest link, and limiting the feeder ampacity to it.
60C terminals with 75C wire means you have to use the 60C column of the NEC for satisfying the termination ampacity.
60C terminals with 90C wire means you have to use the 60C column of the NEC for satisfying the termination ampacity.
Note that 60C terminals are uncommon on new equipment. Officially, 100A and less is by default rated 60C terminations unless listed and marked otherwise. But this is primarily an academic rule. In practice, most terminals are rated otherwise for 75C.
One place you still see 60C terminations in practice, is any time you use NM cable, aka ROMEX. It has a special rule that all of its terminations are rated at 60C, no matter what equipment is on the end. Even if the wire itself has a 90C rating.
75C terminals with 75C wire means you have to use the 75C column of the NEC for satisfying the termination ampacity.
75C terminals with 90C wire means you have to use the 75C column of the NEC for satisfying the termination ampacity. This is the most common situation in my scope of work.
90C terminals with 75C wire means you have to use the 75C column of the NEC for satisfying the termination ampacity. This is rare.
90C terminals (field-installed, not part of a manufactured product) with 90C wire, means you get to use the 90C column of the NEC. This is rare.