Just because I refuse to follow a stupid and pointless rule does not make me a hack.
Well, I suppose that depends on one's definition of "Hack". Arguably, deliberately ignoring NEC requirements, even tho' you are fully aware of them, just because "I know better" (when you really don't) qualifies in spades.
Now, if I said "to hell with all ground wires", that would make me a hack. To do it the way the NEC wants is not the "right" way, they are not making any sense.
Or, you simply don't understand the rationale behind the requirement, and are arrogant enough to believe that if you don't understand it, it must not matter.
I can come up with derogatory words for people who blindly follow the rules, too.
It's not "Blind Faith" when you understand the logic behind the code.
I simply asked for one reasonable explanation of why this would be required. You can't come up with one.
I would have thought it was obvious. Try this:
The NEC requires that when the main conductors are "upsized", presumably to ameliorate voltage drop over a long run, the EGC must ALSO be upsized "proportionally". That is a perfectly reasonable requirement. To understand this, you have to look at the purpose of that EGC, and why it is there in the first place: It is to provide a low-resistance path back to the origin (i.e., ground) when the "normal" path for that return current is interrupted due to a fault or malfunction.
So presume for a moment that there
IS some sort of fault in the circuit which prevents the Neutral from doing its job. If the (already relatively small, compared to the main conductors) EGC is made comparatively still smaller by NOT upsizing it as code requires, it will produce a significantly higher resistance over that same long run which required upsizing the other conductors. If that resistance is TOO high, the return current will (to at least some extent) now seek some other route back to ground -- possibly through a Human. Ooops!
Or, if perhaps this is a "pure" 240V circuit with no Neutral, and one of the hot legs has inadvertently shorted to the EGC, that grossly undersized EGC could conceivably have to carry the full circuit-capacity current, (or more, depending on the breaker's trip curve) for some indefinite period of time. And being both undersized AND an exceptionally long run, that
WILL heat up that EGC, possibly to the point of melting insulation, starting a fire, etc.. Ooops! Again.
Just agree with me that this is a stupid rule they made for no apparent reason.
Sorry, can't do that. As shown above there
ARE good reasons for the requirement.