voltage drop

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Ryan Currin

Member
Location
Allston MA
I have an installation requiring a new sub panel. The sub panel will be located 350 feet away from the meter. The panel will be fed with 100 amp conductors. The breakers in this panel will be 8 20 amp single poles and 1 50 amp 2 pole. The load in this panel will not all be continuous and I cant imagine the load ever exceeding 50 amps continuous at any given time. When sizing the conductors to feed this panel, do I need to calculate the actual load being served or base it on 100 amps? If I base it on 100 amps then the feeders are 300mcm which I don't want to run. Any suggestions?
 

luckylerado

Senior Member
240 Volts.
I don't think so. I believe you need to calculate the design load on the heaviest leg and use 120V.

I will also share something that I just learned while studying for a LEED exam. If your are trying to meet ASHRAE 90.1, you no longer need to limit the feeder to 2%, rather you can use the 5% applied to the whole length. So if your branch circuits are very short and limited to 1%, you now have 4% to play with on the feeder side of the equation which can have a significant impact on the conductor size..
 

Ryan Currin

Member
Location
Allston MA
I did some math on this service. The total lighting load will be 24 amps when fully on and have a garage door opener with OCP at 50 amps with a load of probably 34-40 amps when used. But will be used while the lighting is on and there will be a few general use outlets of load as well. That's a total load of 64 amps which I'll round up to 70 amps I'm guessing. At 350 feet single phase 240 volts 70 amps I'm coming up with 1/0 awg. If I calculate it at 120 volts I get 4/0 awg. That's a big jump. Do you think 1/0 will suffice?
 

ActionDave

Chief Moderator
Staff member
Location
Durango, CO, 10 h 20 min from the winged horses.
Occupation
Licensed Electrician
I did some math on this service. The total lighting load will be 24 amps when fully on and have a garage door opener with OCP at 50 amps with a load of probably 34-40 amps when used. But will be used while the lighting is on and there will be a few general use outlets of load as well. That's a total load of 64 amps which I'll round up to 70 amps I'm guessing. At 350 feet single phase 240 volts 70 amps I'm coming up with 1/0 awg. If I calculate it at 120 volts I get 4/0 awg. That's a big jump. Do you think 1/0 will suffice?
Given what you have described I would use 1/0 AL and be quite content.
 
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