offroadsteve
Well-known member
I think I understand the requirements, but I wanted to run this by the experts.
I'm getting ready to run power to my garage, I have 2" PVC buried from the house to the detached garage, right about 100' (for this calc I don't believe this matters).
My plan is to run 2-2-2-4 MHF as the feeder to the garage sub-panel, and I'd also like to run 4 pieces of 12 AWG THHN/THWN (Bl, R, W, G) for a 3-way switch back in the house.
Looking at the "conductor proximity adjustment factors" table, i'm at 6 current carrying conductors, which means I have to derate to 80% of the 90 degree C column, so the max breaker I can put on the MHF is 80 amps, correct?
I was hoping to protect the feeder at 90 amps (big difference of 10 amps I know...), and the adjustment seems unnecessary in this instance since i'm well under my conduit fill requirements for 2" PVC.
So... the question is what would you do? protect at 90 amps and see if the inspector catches it, or just install the 80 amp breaker and be done with it?
I'm getting ready to run power to my garage, I have 2" PVC buried from the house to the detached garage, right about 100' (for this calc I don't believe this matters).
My plan is to run 2-2-2-4 MHF as the feeder to the garage sub-panel, and I'd also like to run 4 pieces of 12 AWG THHN/THWN (Bl, R, W, G) for a 3-way switch back in the house.
Looking at the "conductor proximity adjustment factors" table, i'm at 6 current carrying conductors, which means I have to derate to 80% of the 90 degree C column, so the max breaker I can put on the MHF is 80 amps, correct?
I was hoping to protect the feeder at 90 amps (big difference of 10 amps I know...), and the adjustment seems unnecessary in this instance since i'm well under my conduit fill requirements for 2" PVC.
So... the question is what would you do? protect at 90 amps and see if the inspector catches it, or just install the 80 amp breaker and be done with it?