Conductor Sizing
Conductor Sizing
Conductor Sizes
You must size conductors using their ampacity from the insulation
temperature rating column of Table 310.15(B)(16) that corresponds to the
lowest temperature rating of any terminal, device, or conductor of the
circuit.
For motors marked with design letters B, C, or D, you can use conductors
having an insulation rating of 75°C or higher if the ampacity of such
conductors doesn’t exceed the 75°C ampacity listed in Table 310.15(B)(16)
[110.14(C)(1)(a)(4)].
For equipment rated 100A or less, you must size the conductors using the
60°C temperature column of Table 310.15(B)(16) [110.14(C)(1)(a)(2)].
Where you have terminals for equipment rated over 100A and/or pressure
connector terminals for conductors larger than 1 AWG, you must size the
conductor per the 75°C temperature rating listed in Table 310.15(B)(16)
[110.14(C)(1)(b)(1)].
Fig. 1. It’s important to know the temperature rating of your pressure
connectors when sizing your conductors.
Overcurrent Protection
An OCPD protects the circuit by opening when the current reaches a value
that will cause an excessive or dangerous temperature rise (overheating) in
the protected conductor(s). OCPDs must have an interrupting rating
sufficient for the maximum possible fault current available on the line-side
terminals of the equipment [Sec. 110.9]. Electrical equipment must have a
short-circuit current rating (SCCR) that permits the circuit’s OCPD to clear
short circuits or ground faults without extensive damage to the circuit’s
electrical components [Sec. 110.10 Note].
There are many different rules for protecting conductors and equipment.
It’s not simply using 12 AWG wire and a 20A breaker. The general rule is
that conductors must be protected at the point where they receive their
supply per their ampacities, as listed in Table 310.15(B)(16) [Sec. 240.21].
Except as permitted by Sec. 240.4(A) through (G), conductors must be
protected against overcurrent per their ampacity after ampacity correction
and adjustment required in Sec. 310.15.
For OCPDs rated 800A or less [Sec. 240.4(B)], the next higher standard
rating of OCPD listed in Sec. 240.6(A) (above the ampacity of the
ungrounded conductors being protected) is permitted. But only if all the
following conditions are met:
(1) The conductors aren’t part of a branch circuit supplying more than one
receptacle for cord- and plug-connected loads.
(3) The next higher standard OCPD rating from Sec. 240.6(A) doesn’t
exceed 800A.
Let’s run through some example problems to drive these points home.
Example No. 1
What’s the maximum size OCPD that can be used to protect 1 AWG
conductors, where each conductor has an ampacity of 130A at 75°C, per
Table 310.15(B)(16), and the calculated load is 104A?
A quick check of the Table reveals the answer to be 150A [Sec. 240.6(A)].
Example No. 2
What’s the maximum size OCPD that can be used to protect 500kcmil
conductors, where each conductor has an ampacity of 380A at 75°C, per
Table 310.15(B)(16), and the calculated load is 370A?
A quick check of the Table reveals the answer to be 400A [Sec. 240.6(A)].
If the circuit’s OCPD exceeds 800A, the conductor ampacity must have a
rating of not less than the rating of the OCPD [Sec. 240.4(C)]. But that’s
only after the application of ambient temperature correction [Sec.
310.15(B)(2)(a)], conductor bundling adjustment [Sec. 310.15(B)(3)(a)], or
both.
1,200A ÷ 3 = 400A
Small Conductors
What size branch-circuit OCPD is required for an air conditioner when the
nameplate indicates the minimum circuit ampacity is 23A, with maximum
overcurrent protection of 35A?
Sec. 460.6(A)(1), use motor full-load current (FLC) from appropriate tables
to size conductors and OCPD. Table 430.248 gives the motor FLC for a 1-
hp, 115V motor, 16 FLC.
Motor conductor size, use Sec. 430.22, 16 FLC × 125% = 20A, Table
310.15(B)(16), 12 AWG rated 20A at 60°C [110.14(C)(1)(a)(1)].
Motor OCPD size, use Sec. 430.52(C), circuit breaker uses 250% of FLC, 16
FLC × 250% = 40A which is a standard size [240.6(A)].
Getting it Right
You must account for all these to arrive at the minimum safe size for a given
conductor. You may want to exceed that size after considering factors such
as voltage drop, to optimize performance. However, you can never go below
that size.
If you’re sizing the conductors for a given system, you are probably also
sizing the overcurrent protection, so you need to understand both to do the
job right.
Conductor Sizing ― Part 2 of 2
To correctly determine the ampacity of a conductor, you must
understand and correct for its conditions of use.
Temperature Correction
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That’s because the wet location will require the use of the THWN
characteristics, and THWN is a 75˚C rated conductor [Table 310.104(A)].
How do you determine the ambient temperature for the application of the
ampacity correction per Table 310.15(B)(2)(a) where raceways or cables are
exposed to direct sunlight and located less than 7/8 in. above the roof? Add
60˚F (33˚C) to the outdoor ambient temperature [Sec. 310.15(B)(3)(c)].
Exception: Type XHHW-2 insulated conductors aren’t subject to that
temperature adder.
Ampacity Adjustment
When conductors are bundled, their ability to dissipate heat is reduced. So,
the ampacity of a conductor must be reduced whenever four or more
current-carrying conductors are bundled together. Where four or more
current-carrying power conductors are within a raceway longer than 24 in.
[Sec. 310.15(B)(3)(a)(2)] — or where cables are bundled for longer than 24
in. — you must reduce the ampacity of each conductor per Table
310.15(B)(3)(a).
Where more than one ampacity applies for a given circuit length, you must
use the lowest ampacity value. When different ampacities apply, the higher
ampacity can be used for the entire circuit if the reduced ampacity length
doesn’t exceed 10 ft or 10% of the length of the higher ampacity, whichever
is less [Sec. 310.15 (A)(2), Exception].
The Table 310.15(B)(3)(a) adjustment factors apply only when there are
more than three current-carrying conductors bundled together. All phase
conductors are considered current-carrying.
Also:
• Wireways are commonly used where access to the conductors within the
raceway is required to make terminations, splices, or taps to several devices
at a single location. When more than 30 current-carrying conductors are
installed in any cross-sectional area of the wireway, the conductor
ampacity, as listed in Table 310.15(B)(16), must be adjusted per Table
310.15(B)(3)(a) [Sec. 376.22(B)].
Question: All conductor terminals are rated 75˚C. What size branch-circuit
conductor (THHN) is required for a 45A continuous nonlinear load that
requires three ungrounded conductors and a neutral (four current-carrying
conductors), as shown in Fig. 2?
Corrected Ampacity = 75A × 80% = 60A, which is adequate for the 45A
load.
(b) The minimum feeder conductor ampacity must be no less than the
maximum load after any adjustment or corrections factors.
Question No. 1: What size feeder conductor (THHN) is required for a 200A
continuous load (Fig. 3)?
Fig. 3. Here’s a good example of how to properly size a feeder conductor
serving a continuous load.
Answer No. 1: Since the load is 200A continuous, the conductors must be
sized to have an ampacity of at least 250A (200A × 125%). According to
Table 310.15(B)(16), 75˚C column [Sec. 110.14(C)(1)(b)(1)], a 250kcmil
conductor is suitable. That’s because it has an ampere rating of 255A at
75˚C before any conductor ampacity adjustment and/or correction is
applied [Sec. 215.2(A)(1)(a)].
Question No. 2: What size feeder conductor (THHN) is required for a 100A
continuous load and 100A of noncontinuous load
Answer No. 2: Since the load is 100A continuous and 100A noncontinuous,
the conductors must be sized to have an ampacity of at least 225A (100A ×
1.25 + 100A). According to Table 310.15(B)(16), 75˚C column
[110.14(C)(1)(b)(1)], a 4/0 THHN conductor is suitable. That’s because it
has an ampere rating of 230A at 75˚C before any conductor ampacity
adjustment and/or correction is applied.
• Used the correct ampacity table for your conductor type and the number
bundled together.
• Used the correct temperature column (the one for the lowest-rated
device).