- Location
- Lockport, IL
- Occupation
- Semi-Retired Electrical Engineer
Two part question. I am assisting in the design of a large laboratory building. The company has created a standard spreadsheet for performing the service calculation. They also have spreadsheet for individual panel schedules, but that spreadsheet does not have the problem I am about to describe.
When the "service calculation" spreadsheet calculates receptacle load, it starts with the area of each floor, and multiplies by an assumed value of watts per square foot. The assumed value of w/ft2 might vary, depending on the types of rooms (lab versus office versus corridor versus equipment room, etc) that are contained on each floor. Then the spreadsheet takes the first 10,000 watts, and adds 50% of the remaining watts. Clearly, its author had in mind Table 220.44.
Question (Part 1): Is this a mis-application of the table? I think it is. I think you cannot use Table 220.44, if you calculate the receptacle load on a ?watts per square foot? basis.
Question (Part 2): Does anyone have any experience in comparing receptacle load, as calculated on the basis of ?watts per square foot,? to receptacle load, as calculated on the basis of counting the number of installed (or planned) receptacle outlets, and assigning 180 VA to each duplex? My initial conjecture, using an office/cubicle situation as an example, is that the ?watts per square foot? basis is going to start out low, and that applying the demand factor of Table 220.44 will end up undersizing the service.
Comments????
When the "service calculation" spreadsheet calculates receptacle load, it starts with the area of each floor, and multiplies by an assumed value of watts per square foot. The assumed value of w/ft2 might vary, depending on the types of rooms (lab versus office versus corridor versus equipment room, etc) that are contained on each floor. Then the spreadsheet takes the first 10,000 watts, and adds 50% of the remaining watts. Clearly, its author had in mind Table 220.44.
Question (Part 1): Is this a mis-application of the table? I think it is. I think you cannot use Table 220.44, if you calculate the receptacle load on a ?watts per square foot? basis.
Question (Part 2): Does anyone have any experience in comparing receptacle load, as calculated on the basis of ?watts per square foot,? to receptacle load, as calculated on the basis of counting the number of installed (or planned) receptacle outlets, and assigning 180 VA to each duplex? My initial conjecture, using an office/cubicle situation as an example, is that the ?watts per square foot? basis is going to start out low, and that applying the demand factor of Table 220.44 will end up undersizing the service.
Comments????