I think it pulls easier then individual conductors - because it acts like one instead of three or four.It is probably cheaper because it is sold more often than the individual conductors of Thwn-2. I believe xhhw is a more rugged insulation and a bit smaller in area than thwn-2.
My supplier only sells the xhhw as a quadraplex so the pull may be a bit harder than individual conductors- Larger pipe perhaps
Also keep in mind if triplexed or quadraplexed it is one cable, and your raceway fill jumps to 53% allowable for one conductor or cable, but is based on overall diameter of the bundle and not each individual conductor.
If it is a cable, it has to be a type recognized by the NEC as a cable. If not, "they" are single conductors.The packing factor of three wires in a triplexed bundle, for how they fit in the overall bundle diameter is 65%.
65% of 53% = 34.5%
Which percentage should govern? The 34.5% based on how the triplexed bundle fits as if it were a single conductor? Or the 40%, based on how the three conductors fit if they were individual conductors?
Here it is... new underlined.XHHW-2 simply plexed or twisted together doesn't make them a cable and it doesn't permit them to fill a raceway to 53%....been preaching this for years but the 2017 NEC made that clear in Chapter 9, Table 1 note 9.
(9) A multiconductor cable, optical fiber cable, or flexible
cord of two or more conductors shall be treated as a single
conductor for calculating percentage conduit or tubing
fill area. For cables that have elliptical cross sections, the
cross-sectional area calculation shall be based on using
the major diameter of the ellipse as a circle diameter.
Assemblies of single insulated conductors without an
overall covering shall not be considered a cable when
determining conduit or tubing fill area. The conduit or
tubing fill for the assemblies shall be calculated based
upon the individual conductors.
XHHW-2 simply plexed or twisted together doesn't make them a cable and it doesn't permit them to fill a raceway to 53%....been preaching this for years but the 2017 NEC made that clear in Chapter 9, Table 1 note 9.
Comments based on the 2017 National Electrical Code.
Not by much.It is more conservative to treat a triplex of wires as a single cable, than it is to treat the wires as individual wires. While 53% looks higher than 40%, that 53% would also includes the gray void space as shown in the following diagram. So that means limiting the gray+black region to 53% of the total, means limiting the black region to 34.5% of the total.
Agreed. Basically it boils down to the coefficient of friction and surface contact points. While pre-twisting doesn't evoke the 53% fill....the reduction of "in contact" surface area aids the pull in general.I still find multiplexed conductors easier to pull then single conductors in general, I believe it is because they act like a single conductor/cable to some extent. Now they are a big PITA if you have a conduit body that isn't oversized in the run unless maybe it is just a short length after the conduit body to an enclosure that those conductors will terminate in.
Agreed. Basically it boils down to the coefficient of friction and surface contact points. While pre-twisting doesn't evoke the 53% fill....the reduction of "in contact" surface area aids the pull in general.
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Then why do dragsters run on racing slicks?Surface area in contact does not affect friction. It affects the local pressure due to friction, but not the overall relation between friction and constraint force.
Then why do dragsters run on racing slicks?
Wrong AGAIN!Surface area in contact does not affect friction. It affects the local pressure due to friction, but not the overall relation between friction and constraint force.
