table c10 in the nec

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kimrichi

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if i have 120/208 three phase system and if service conductors amp is 750 andit is parallel in 2 raceways when looking to find right size 40 pvc raceway should not be size(2 and half)to accommodate 4 conducter(3 HOT AND 1 NEUTRAL)?
 

Dennis Alwon

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Retired Electrical Contractor
I would not use annex C as that is for informational purpose and has a few errors in it. Use Chapter 9 Tables 4 and 5.
 

jumper

Senior Member
U iz is u... I seriously have found some major contradictions. In one case Annex C allowed 9 wires and the other method allowed 6.

Wow. I heard it was screwed up, but that is bad. I remember when I came here that i was told I should drop Annex C, have not used it since, besides most test questions are mixed sizes so Annex C is no good anyways. They do it on purpose so you have to use Chap 9.
 

kimrichi

Member
AL or CU, what insulation? 2 sets 500mcm CU or 700 AL? If AL, 3 350mcm might be easier.
it is THWN copper my question is the number of conductor should be 4 but in mike holt book(nec exam preparation 2008 edition page 294)he counts only 3 wires why?
 

Dennis Alwon

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Staff member
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Occupation
Retired Electrical Contractor
Unless the load being served is high in electronics and fluorescent lighting then there is probably a good chance the neutral is not counted-- but that is for ampacity derating not conduit fill. Look at 310.15(B)(4) 2008 Nec
 

jumper

Senior Member
Unless the load being served is high in electronics and fluorescent lighting then there is probably a good chance the neutral is not counted-- but that is for ampacity derating not conduit fill. Look at 310.15(B)(4) 2008 Nec

And it is somewhat rare that an upsized neutral is used for a feeder or service, or that the neutral is counted as CCC, mostly branch circuits in my experience.
 

jumper

Senior Member
Infinity/Rob wrote this and I keep it bookmarked:

Here's some examples of when to count the neutral as a CCC:

208Y/120 volt system-different circuit types:

A)- 2 wire circuit w/ 1 ungrounded, 1 neutral = 2 CCC's
B)- 3 wire circuit w/ 2 ungrounded, 1 neutral = 3 CCC's
C)- 4 wire circuit w/ 3 ungrounded, 1 neutral = 3 CCC's*

Notes:
A)- A normal 2 wire circuit has equal current flowing in each of the circuit conductors so they both count as CCC's.
B)- In this circuit the neutral current will be nearly equal to the current in the ungrounded conductors so the neutral counts as a CCC
C)- In this circuit the neutral will only carry the imbalance of the current between the three ungrounded conductors so it is not counted as a CCC, with one exception, *if the current is more than 50% nonlinear then the neutral would count as a CCC.

120/240 volt system-different circuit types:

D)- 2 wire circuit w/ 1 ungrounded, 1 neutral = 2 CCC's
E)- 3 wire circuit w/ 2 ungrounded, 1 neutral = 2 CCC's

Notes:
D)- A normal 2 wire circuit has equal current flowing in each of the circuit conductors so they both count as CCC's.
E)- In this circuit the neutral will only carry the imbalance between the two ungrounded condcutors so the neutral is not counted as a CCC.
 
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