Hendrix
Senior Member
- Location
- New England
Can a temp be less than 100a.?
230.79 Rating of Service Disconnecting Means.
The service disconnecting means shall have a rating not less than the calculated load to be carried, determined in accordance with Part III, IV, or V of Article 220, as applicable. In no case shall the rating be lower than specified in 230.79(A), (B), (C), or (D).
(A) One-Circuit Installations. For installations to supply only limited loads of a single branch circuit, the service disconnecting means shall have a rating of not less than 15 amperes.
(B) Two-Circuit Installations. For installations consisting of not more than two 2-wire branch circuits, the service disconnecting means shall have a rating of not less than 30 amperes.
(C) One-Family Dwellings. For a one-family dwelling, the service disconnecting means shall have a rating of not less than 100 amperes, 3-wire.
(D) All Others. For all other installations, the service disconnecting means shall have a rating of not less than 60 amperes.
And (D) is 60 amps and that is the disconnect rating.IMO you need to comply with this part of Article 230 even for a temporary service.
IMO you need to comply with this part of Article 230 even for a temporary service.
And (D) is 60 amps and that is the disconnect rating.
Why would I have to comply with 230 for a 590 install?
590.4 General.
(A) Services. Services shall be installed in conformance
with Parts I through VIII of Article 230, as applicable.
What is applicable for a temp service?
However art. 230.42(B) IMO, means that the service conductors must be sized for the disconnect determined in 230.79
Unless I missed sometihng, the section I posted is in part VI which is between parts I through VIII.
Define a SFD please.
That should come from the building code not the NEC.
How is that applicable to the OP anyway?
I am thinking I misconstrued/misread your OP on this topic: Is a 100 amp service temp required for a load that is less? SFD or otherwise?