Small parallel conductors

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Dennis Alwon

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Staff member
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Occupation
Retired Electrical Contractor
Field wiring, besides not meeting the requirements for paralleling small conductors I don't think breakers are not normally listed for doubling lugging.


Most aren't but one could use a splice and get away with that. But as stated above it is a violation anyway
 

petersonra

Senior Member
Location
Northern illinois
Occupation
engineer
A100 amp breaker with two #6 wires in parallel feeding a heater from that breaker! ANY IDEA WHY ? Have never run across this before. Any thoughts?

are you sure they are actually in parallel?

take a look at 424.22 (B). a 100 amp Cb would not be allowed for space heaters unless there is some kind of protection downstream. Is this a space heater?
 

GoldDigger

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Location
Placerville, CA, USA
Occupation
Retired PV System Designer
A100 amp breaker with two #6 wires in parallel feeding a heater from that breaker! ANY IDEA WHY ? Have never run across this before. Any thoughts?
If there were two resistance windings inside the heater, with separate terminals, and each wire went to a different winding, they would not be in parallel. But a resistive fault on one wire would overload that wire without necessarily tripping the shared breaker.
And, of course, one winding would not be properly protected against some types of fault by the large breaker whether the wires were in parallel or not.
As stated earlier, the heater may well calm for two supply circuits each protected at a lower current.
 

terry talbot

Member
Location
houma, la
mystery solved, the mechanical contractor instructed the electrician to run 2 # 6 conductors to serve the heater. instead of installing 2 60 amp breakers he chose to double lug them onto a 100 amp breaker. Thanks for the feedback.

Terry T
 
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