To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Compressor wiring with 10/3 and emt question

ml504

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2008
Messages
99
I have a roll of 10/3 romex that I was given so I want to use that to run for my compressor (80 gallon Kobal from Lowes). I have a fairly straight run with only one curve that totals about 60 feet. Reading on here and what I have read about code in regards to romex in emt, it seems if I use 3/4 emt I should be under the fill limit as this is a total enclosed run of emt from breaker box to outlet. My question is do I need to be concerned with derating for this short of a run? Any suggestions or help is appreciated.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

KenC

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 20, 2009
Messages
2,578
Post your compressors amp draw and someone can provide a better answer.
 

Falcon67

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2009
Messages
18,371
Location
Merkel, TX
If it's a 5HP like most, he'll draw around 16A @ 240V. I don't know about the conduit fill, but seems like the wire will be the right size. The Lowes spec sheet shows 18.5A which seems a bit high for 4.7HP.
 
OP
M

ml504

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2008
Messages
99
Falcon, those specs are what I have as well. I am just wondering if because I am running romex inside a complete run of emt will I need to factor in any extra drop. Thanks.
 

MrMark

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2010
Messages
4,626
Location
Southern Cal.
Derating for romex in conduit akin to bundling issues with 9 or more conductors? Haven't seen it but good question. Shows you are thinking.
 

mrb

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2008
Messages
3,734
i think you just need to consider the fill (and that is based on the cross section of the whole cable treated as one conductor. You cant calculate the fill based on the individual conductors inside the romex. I dont know if 3/4" would cut it for 10/3 (and i dont envy anyone who gets to pull that) I would sell the romex and buy the right wire.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Bill_Brasky

Active member
Joined
Jan 31, 2011
Messages
33
Location
MN
I just ran 12/3 thru 20 ft of 1/2" emt with 2 bends with no problems. Are you sure you need 10/3? The motor on my 7.5 HP (prob a generous rating) is 15 A.

eta: sorry, I see the 10/3 was given to you.
 
Last edited:

Charles (in GA)

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2006
Messages
12,489
Location
50 mi south of Atlanta
I just ran 12/3 thru 20 ft of 1/2" emt with 2 bends with no problems. Are you sure you need 10/3? The motor on my 7.5 HP (prob a generous rating) is 15 A.

That would be a very optimistic maximum "starting" horsepower. Based on the amp load (assuming 120v) would only be about 1 hp. Even if 240v, only about 2 hp running.

Charles
 

Falcon67

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2009
Messages
18,371
Location
Merkel, TX
I just ran 12/3 thru 20 ft of 1/2" emt with 2 bends with no problems. Are you sure you need 10/3? The motor on my 7.5 HP (prob a generous rating) is 15 A.

You have something wrong there - real 7.5 HP is 23 amps at 240V, not including any power factors or whatnot. 745w per HP - 5587 watts. That's 10 gauge easy, maybe 8. If it really draws 15A, it aint 7.5HP IMHO.
 

Bill_Brasky

Active member
Joined
Jan 31, 2011
Messages
33
Location
MN
You have something wrong there - real 7.5 HP is 23 amps at 240V, not including any power factors or whatnot. 745w per HP - 5587 watts. That's 10 gauge easy, maybe 8. If it really draws 15A, it aint 7.5HP IMHO.

I don't have anything wrong. I said it was a generous rating. I didn't do the math, but I knew the 7.5 HP sticker on the compressor didn't coincide with the 15A rating on the motor.
 

eriksalo

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 29, 2007
Messages
184
Location
Colorado
There are three issues here:

1) The rating of the compressor. Consumer oriented compressors are notorious for claiming a horsepower higher than theoretically possible. I have small Craftsman 110V that runs on a 15 Amp circuit just fine and claims to be 7.5 "peak" horsepower. I also have an industrial Speedaire 2-stage compressor that needs a 50 Amp 6 gage circuit. The speedair is also listed at 7.5 hp.

2) Rating of wire size: If your compressor needs 16 Amps then you should have 12 gage wire. By the book (and there are some exceptions for motor inrush, run length, conduit, etc) here are the guidelines:


14 Gage: 15 Amp
12 Gage: 20 Amp
10 Gage: 30 Amp
8 Gage: 40 Amp (for larger sizes, the exceptions start to matter)
6 Gage: 50 Amp (for larger sizes, the exceptions start to matter)​

It does not matter if the circuit is 220V or 110V for the amperage rating (if questions about why this is true, post back and I'll do my best to explain).

In the NEC, there is significant exception in wire size for running electric motors. The reason is when an electric motor starts, it uses a huge amount of current compared to it's "normal" operating current requirement. The NEC recognizes this and allows you to use a wire size based more on normal than start current. If you had to size for start current, that would be much larger wire. You are also allowed to use slow blow fuses for electric motors.

For you application, since you say you need 16 Amps, you will need 12 gage wire as a minimum. 10 Gage is great if you have it but not strictly required.

3) Romex (NM or NM-B) in conduit: There is debate wether or not NM wire can be used in conduit and still be code compliant. I've looked hard for this in the NEC and haven't found a clause prohibiting it for inside use (can someone prove me wrong on this, please?). However, most inspectors where I live will fail you for running NM in conduit. It's clear by code that NM is not allowed in conduit for underground or outside applications.
 

Aceman

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 28, 2007
Messages
2,513
Location
Eastern Oregon
2) Rating of wire size: If your compressor needs 16 Amps then you should have 12 gage wire. By the book (and there are some exceptions for motor inrush, run length, conduit, etc) here are the guidelines:


14 Gage: 15 Amp
12 Gage: 20 Amp
10 Gage: 30 Amp
8 Gage: 40 Amp (for larger sizes, the exceptions start to matter)
6 Gage: 50 Amp (for larger sizes, the exceptions start to matter)​

Those aren't the correct cable ampacities for motor circuits. You need to look at Table 310.16 and 240.4(D) in the 08 NEC.

3) Romex (NM or NM-B) in conduit: There is debate wether or not NM wire can be used in conduit and still be code compliant. I've looked hard for this in the NEC and haven't found a clause prohibiting it for inside use (can someone prove me wrong on this, please?). However, most inspectors where I live will fail you for running NM in conduit. It's clear by code that NM is not allowed in conduit for underground or outside applications.

This will clear it up:

http://forums.mikeholt.com/showthread.php?t=133895&highlight=romex+in+conduit
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom