electro7
Senior Member
- Location
- Northern CA, US
- Occupation
- Electrician, Solar and Electrical Contractor
Hi,
I did a commercial job where we ran feeders to condensing rooftop units for split units with separate circuits to fan coils inside. The HVAC contractor was doing troubleshooting because a bunch of components were causing problems in the units such as melting circuit boards, a compressor went out, etc and fuses and circuit breakers were tripping.
He called to ask me how I wired them and wanted to make sure the wire was big enough. Originally the engineer had on the plans #10 awg cu thwn-2 on 40A breakers and such. I thought that would need to be #8 so I told the engineer. He later came back to me and said that because they were motor loads I could down size the conductors and that he had it right to begin with. I told him I didn't know much about the motor code section so assumed he was correct.
Back to the condenser issues- I ran for example say 3-4 units feeders in a homerun conduit, which say would be 8 current carrying conductors (1 phase no neutral) max which would be an adjustment of 70 percent. One unit for example said max OCPD 50A min OCPD 30A which I ran #8 to. The current the HVAC tech said was normally to be around 24 amps, that they would often run less but these were hitting 28 amps which was frying boards and somehow evetually tripping breakers and blowing fuses. I wanted to make sure that the #8 cu thwn-2 was okay for this application. This particular unit was protected by a 50A breaker and 50A supplementary fuses at the unit. #8 thwn-2 base ampacity is 55 amps. 70% of 55 amps is 38.5 amps. Is this okay for this unit?
The engineer pointed out it is a motor load while the HVAC tech said it was a variable speed and would start at like 3 amps and go up to normal running current but wouldn't take a surge. He also said the manufacturer was having some malfunctioning parts but wanted to make sure the wiring was okay. When he measured voltage it was consistent and didn't have a lag.
I told him I think there is an issues with the units because the wiring wouldn't cause over amperage.
Any thoughts?
Sent from my SM-G998U using Tapatalk
I did a commercial job where we ran feeders to condensing rooftop units for split units with separate circuits to fan coils inside. The HVAC contractor was doing troubleshooting because a bunch of components were causing problems in the units such as melting circuit boards, a compressor went out, etc and fuses and circuit breakers were tripping.
He called to ask me how I wired them and wanted to make sure the wire was big enough. Originally the engineer had on the plans #10 awg cu thwn-2 on 40A breakers and such. I thought that would need to be #8 so I told the engineer. He later came back to me and said that because they were motor loads I could down size the conductors and that he had it right to begin with. I told him I didn't know much about the motor code section so assumed he was correct.
Back to the condenser issues- I ran for example say 3-4 units feeders in a homerun conduit, which say would be 8 current carrying conductors (1 phase no neutral) max which would be an adjustment of 70 percent. One unit for example said max OCPD 50A min OCPD 30A which I ran #8 to. The current the HVAC tech said was normally to be around 24 amps, that they would often run less but these were hitting 28 amps which was frying boards and somehow evetually tripping breakers and blowing fuses. I wanted to make sure that the #8 cu thwn-2 was okay for this application. This particular unit was protected by a 50A breaker and 50A supplementary fuses at the unit. #8 thwn-2 base ampacity is 55 amps. 70% of 55 amps is 38.5 amps. Is this okay for this unit?
The engineer pointed out it is a motor load while the HVAC tech said it was a variable speed and would start at like 3 amps and go up to normal running current but wouldn't take a surge. He also said the manufacturer was having some malfunctioning parts but wanted to make sure the wiring was okay. When he measured voltage it was consistent and didn't have a lag.
I told him I think there is an issues with the units because the wiring wouldn't cause over amperage.
Any thoughts?
Sent from my SM-G998U using Tapatalk