wwhitney
Senior Member
- Location
- Berkeley, CA
- Occupation
- Retired
Well, one constraint that will determine whether it's acceptable is the resulting temperature rise in the conductor. But I guess you're suggesting that the application will itself determine another likely lower constraint, so that the temperature rise won't be the controlling constraint?Again, do the math to figure out the resistive loss and then decide if that's acceptable; all else follows from that.
That can still only be determined by checking the temperature rise. But I guess if the conductor size from this other application constraint is sufficiently large, it will be easy to give an upper bound on the temperature rise by comparing to one of the NEC tables that is clearly conservative for this application.
Cheers, Wayne