210.19(A)(1)

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DBoone

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Mississippi
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Branch circuit conductors shall have an ampacity not less than the maximum load to served. Where a branch circuit supplies continuous loads or any combination of continuous and non continuous loads, the minimum branch circuit conductor size, before the application of any adjustment or correction factors, shall have an allowable ampacity not less than the non continuous load plus 125 percent of the continuous load. Explain the part about " before the application of any adjustment or correction factors". When dealing with NM-B I got confused about derating from the 90 degree column but the ampacity got be greater than the 60 degree column and how to take all of that into consideration when sizing a circuit with both continuous and no continuous loads.
 

Smart $

Esteemed Member
Location
Ohio
Branch circuit conductors shall have an ampacity not less than the maximum load to served. Where a branch circuit supplies continuous loads or any combination of continuous and non continuous loads, the minimum branch circuit conductor size, before the application of any adjustment or correction factors, shall have an allowable ampacity not less than the non continuous load plus 125 percent of the continuous load. Explain the part about " before the application of any adjustment or correction factors". When dealing with NM-B I got confused about derating from the 90 degree column but the ampacity got be greater than the 60 degree column and how to take all of that into consideration when sizing a circuit with both continuous and no continuous loads.
Determining whether a conductor has sufficient ampacity under 210.19(A)(1) has two parts...

First it has to have an adjusted and corrected ampacity not less than the calculated load. With NM, you use the 90?C column value to derate from. The calculated load does not include an additional 25% for continuous loads.

Second, you have to coordinate your size to terminal temperature limitations under 110.14(C). For NM, the temperature limitation is 60?C regardless of terminal rating or conductor size [334.80]. This means the minimum size is determined using the 60?C column values and continuous loads are factored an additional 25% (i.e. 125% continuous plus 100% non-continuous). There is no adjustment for the number of current-carrying conductors or correction for ambient temperature... the "before" part of the requirement.
 

DBoone

Senior Member
Location
Mississippi
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General Contractor
Hey thanks for the feedback and I wanted to say when I typed the question I spaced it out so it was easy to read but when it posted it was all bunched up. Sorry about that.
 

DBoone

Senior Member
Location
Mississippi
Occupation
General Contractor
Would you mind giving me an example using a 20 amp branch circuit serving continuous and non continuous loads with NM-B. It will sink in my head when I see the calculations worked out on paper.
 

Smart $

Esteemed Member
Location
Ohio
Hey thanks for the feedback and I wanted to say when I typed the question I spaced it out so it was easy to read but when it posted it was all bunched up. Sorry about that.
Forum software parses out multiple space characters to a single space. To achieve white space, use double-return paragraphs.
 

Smart $

Esteemed Member
Location
Ohio
Would you mind giving me an example using a 20 amp branch circuit serving continuous and non continuous loads with NM-B. It will sink in my head when I see the calculations worked out on paper.
Well when you say a 20A branch circuit, you should know that 210.3 says branch circuit rating is in accordance with the ocpd rating... not the conductor ampacity. In effect, that adds another dimension to the determination.

210.20(A), disregarding the exception thereto, requires the OCPD rating to be not less than the non-continuous load plus 125% of the continuous load. So you have to consider 210.20(B) requires the circuit conductors to be protected in accordance with 240.4.

For a 20A branch circuit using NM-B, 240.4 typically doesn't affect the determination because of the 20A max ocpd requirement for 12AWG. When you get into higher rated circuits, there are instances where the conductor size has to be increased in order for it to be protected by the ocpd at its ampacity. For a 20A branch circuit, suffice it to say that conductor ampacity determined under 210.19(A)(1) has to greater than the next smaller standard ocpd rating: 15A.

Now, getting to the determination calculations:

First step is to multiply the continuous load by 125% and add the non-continuous. Using that result, look at the 60?C column of Table 310.15(B)(16). If it equals a value therein, its corresponding size is the minimum. If the result is in between column values, we use the next larger corresponding size as the minimum. Note this determines minimum conductor size, not sizing for ampacity.

Second step is sizing for ampacity. Here we will make allowances for the conditions of use, namely ambient temperature correction under 310.15(B)(2) and adjustment for current-carrying conductors in close proximity under 310.15(B)(3). For NM-B we can use the 90?C column values of Table 310.15(B)(16) as the basis for this determination...

Take the calculated load (no 125% factoring for continuous load) and divide it by adjustment and correction factors as applicable. Using the resulting value, if it equals a value in the 90?C column, its corresponding size is the minimum. If the result is in between column values, we use the next larger corresponding size as the minimum. Note this determines minimum conductor size for ampacity as it correlates to the calculated load.

Step three compare sizes of steps one and two. The larger of the two sizes is the required minimum size conductor.

Step four is to determine circuit ampacity. Take the 90?C column value of the minimum required size determined in step three and multiply by the adjustment and correction factors. Compare to the 60?C value. The smaller of the two is the circuit ampacity.

Step five is to make certain this conductor is protected by the ocpd. The minimum ocpd rating is the same value determine in step one, first sentence. For 800 ampere and lesser circuit ampacities, we can use the next larger standard ocpd rating. Whether using an adjustable or standard rating ocpd, if the circuit ampacity determined in step four is equal or greater than the next lower standard rating, the conductor is protected with this ocpd rating. Where the ocpd rating is greater than 800 amperes, the circuit ampacity must equal or exceed that rating. When an rated greater than the minimum ocpd is used, the conductor size and circuit ampacity will have to be adjusted using in part the method prescribed in the preceding steps.


I believe the preceeding to be a fairly comprehensive outline of the steps involved. In practice, the steps will seem much less involved once the principles are understood... :angel:
 

DBoone

Senior Member
Location
Mississippi
Occupation
General Contractor
My head hurts from studying this :blink:

I believe I'm trying to make it way more complicated than it needs to be.

One more example and I will have it!

Make up a list of numbers (continuous and non continuous loads, type of conductor used, ambient temp, etc) and walk me step by step thru the calculation process.

Layman's terms :) and thank for helping me learn.
 

Smart $

Esteemed Member
Location
Ohio
My head hurts from studying this :blink:

I believe I'm trying to make it way more complicated than it needs to be.

One more example and I will have it!

Make up a list of numbers (continuous and non continuous loads, type of conductor used, ambient temp, etc) and walk me step by step thru the calculation process.

Layman's terms :) and thank for helping me learn.
Do you realize how many possible combinations there are with no less than 6 variables... :slaphead:

Pick one set...
 

DBoone

Senior Member
Location
Mississippi
Occupation
General Contractor
Do you realize how many possible combinations there are with no less than 6 variables... :slaphead:

Pick one set...

10A non continuous load, 4A continuous load

NM cable

Ambient Temp = 87-95 F

75 degree terminals

4 cables (8 conductors) bundled together.

Can you work with that?
 

Smart $

Esteemed Member
Location
Ohio
10A non continuous load, 4A continuous load

NM cable

Ambient Temp = 87-95 F

75 degree terminals

4 cables (8 conductors) bundled together.

Can you work with that?
1) 10A + 4A ? 125% = 15A
Minimum 14AWG copper... *NM is 60?C per 334.80, 75?C terminals moot under 110.14(C)​

2) 87-95?F ambient correction: 0.96 @ 90?
8 CCC adjustment: 70%
(10A + 4A) ? 0.96 ? 70% = 20.8A
Minimum 14AWG copper

3) Minimum 14AWG copper

4) 14AWG copper allowable ampacity (NM@90?C): 25A
Apply adjustment and correction...
25A ? 0.96 ? 70% = 16.8A
14AWG copper @ 60?C allowable ampacity= 15A
Circuit ampacity is smaller of two: 15A

5) 10A + 4A ? 125% = 15A
Minimum OCPD rating: 15A
20A OCPD will be used.​
14AWG not permitted to be protected by 20A OCPD per 240.4(D)(3)
Circuit conductor upsized to 12AWG.​
 

DBoone

Senior Member
Location
Mississippi
Occupation
General Contractor
1) 10A + 4A ? 125% = 15A
Minimum 14AWG copper... *NM is 60?C per 334.80, 75?C terminals moot under 110.14(C)​

2) 87-95?F ambient correction: 0.96 @ 90?
8 CCC adjustment: 70%
(10A + 4A) ? 0.96 ? 70% = 20.8A
Minimum 14AWG copper

3) Minimum 14AWG copper

4) 14AWG copper allowable ampacity (NM@90?C): 25A
Apply adjustment and correction...
25A ? 0.96 ? 70% = 16.8A
14AWG copper @ 60?C allowable ampacity= 15A
Circuit ampacity is smaller of two: 15A

5) 10A + 4A ? 125% = 15A
Minimum OCPD rating: 15A
20A OCPD will be used.​
14AWG not permitted to be protected by 20A OCPD per 240.4(D)(3)
Circuit conductor upsized to 12AWG.​

Thank you :thumbsup: When I get off of work I will work thru the math and do some more practice scenarios. Thanks for taking the time.
 
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