There is a park in our town that has a 1/3 mile walking trail around it.
Recently they have installed (16) 240v Decorative Lamp Post with 150w MH Lamps approximately every 100' around the outside of the trail.
I noticed when they were installing the conduit stubouts from the pole standards they were all 3/4" pvc & was wondering how that would be large enough for the Conductors they would have to pull to satisfy the voltage drop. Each light pole has a gfi receptacle mounted on it. The (8) East poles are feed off a 2p 20a breaker with #10 Thhn for the Fixtures and (1) 1p 20a breaker Feeds (8) of the gfi receptacles mounted on the poles.The same goes for the West Side Poles and Receptacles.I dont see how the #10 wire is sufficient to carry the load when the farthest outlet is 800' away from the source, but everything seems to work fine.How do you determine the load for the receptacles if you dont know what the load will be? If there was a 16 amp load at the farthest GFI I come up with almost a 32 volt drop. Am I looking at this the wron way?
Recently they have installed (16) 240v Decorative Lamp Post with 150w MH Lamps approximately every 100' around the outside of the trail.
I noticed when they were installing the conduit stubouts from the pole standards they were all 3/4" pvc & was wondering how that would be large enough for the Conductors they would have to pull to satisfy the voltage drop. Each light pole has a gfi receptacle mounted on it. The (8) East poles are feed off a 2p 20a breaker with #10 Thhn for the Fixtures and (1) 1p 20a breaker Feeds (8) of the gfi receptacles mounted on the poles.The same goes for the West Side Poles and Receptacles.I dont see how the #10 wire is sufficient to carry the load when the farthest outlet is 800' away from the source, but everything seems to work fine.How do you determine the load for the receptacles if you dont know what the load will be? If there was a 16 amp load at the farthest GFI I come up with almost a 32 volt drop. Am I looking at this the wron way?