I know this thread is a couple weeks old but I just had to add my $0.02. To the original poster, I'd ask the inspector, more than likely he'd OK it unless you got him mad or were wearing a sports jersey from his rival team.
Now to the code issue, I agree with MRB's interpretation of the NEC, however that's not what I believe that they had in mind when they wrote it. When push comes to shove, it's the AHJ that has the last word.
What I think they meant to say was that when you increase the size of the ungrounded conductors, you then have to increase the size of the ground to whatever ground size would be required for that rating of wire.
For example, looking at table 250.122
If you used cable rated for 60A but fed it with a 30A breaker you would need a 10awg ground. It just so happens that both 30A and 60A rated wire both require a 10awg ground.
Now if you use a cable rated for 100A but feed it with a 60A breaker, you would need a 8awg ground because 100A wire needs an 8awg ground.
MRB's interpretation is correct from my opinion, but the code is written wrong.
Lets try another one, I have a garage 300ft away from my house and want to feed it with 100A service as a subpanel fed from my house. I would need 1awg aluminum conductors for 100A at 75C. But for voltage drop and available wire sizes in aluminum, I use 4/O. I've increased 4 sizes, so per 250.122 100A breaker would have been a 6awg al cable, but upsizing that 4 sizes is a 2awg aluminum ground (based on circular mil). Looking at 250.122, a 2awg al ground is good for a 300A breaker!!
So legally according to the NEC and MRB, I can
1: run 100A feeder breaker to the garage using 4/O, 4/O, 4/O, 2awg
2: run 180A feeder breaker to the garage using 4/O, 4/O, 4/O, 4awg
(4/O is rated at 180A at 75C)
I agree with MRB's interpretation, I just think the NEC wording is incorrect and that the above example shows this. The NEC doesn't _require_ you to take voltage drop into consideration, so in #2, it would pass everything except excessive voltage drop at 180A...
As others have stated, when you oversize wire for voltage drop, you affect short circuit impedance. However I believe table 250.122 takes that into account.
This thread has brought to my attention that I need to talk to my AHJ to OK my garage feeder plans as I had intended to use a 100A breaker and a 4awg ground...
OK, so maybe it was $0.04
Brian
I edited this post after doing the math on circular mil ratio.