MFortie
Well-known member
I'm rebuilding our vacation home outdoor kitchen and am adding some circuits. The original kitchen had two circuits, 12AWG THHN on a twin 20A breaker running through 3/4" PVC roughly 25' to feed 1) convenience outlets circuit and 2) a lighting circuit. I had an beverage cooler plugged into one of the outlets and didn't have any issues for about seven years.
My new design adds (2) more circuits -- dedicated outlet for the cooler and a dedicated outlet for an undersink 120V Bosch water heater (switched - vacation place that's not occupied all the time). I had planned on two 20A twins to feed the circuits. Still 12AWG (new), same conduit run.
I'm negotiating with an AZ licensed sparky for the work and am getting some pushback. First, he said 44 cu in. fill in a 46 cu in. box wouldn't work (4s, 3.5d, where all the conductors land and includes the H20 switch and an outlet). He also said the conduit fill was exceeded. Per the Southwire calculator, I came up with a >20% fill (9 conductors in 3/4" PVC). He's backed off on those after I sent supporting documentation. Still bitching about the crowded box though...
The biggest hurdle is he's claiming we need to use 15A twins instead of 20A due to derating (I have one 20A twin already existing). The location gets 120F ambient temps during the summer (Colorado River, CA/AZ). He's claiming it will violate the NEC.
My Q is whether the 20A twins would violate the NEC based on the above. I can live with changing out the existing 20A to 15A, but am mostly curious if he's correct.
And, since I work with an engineering firm, I had one of the EEs vet the design and he didn't see any issues.
Thanks in advance.
My new design adds (2) more circuits -- dedicated outlet for the cooler and a dedicated outlet for an undersink 120V Bosch water heater (switched - vacation place that's not occupied all the time). I had planned on two 20A twins to feed the circuits. Still 12AWG (new), same conduit run.
I'm negotiating with an AZ licensed sparky for the work and am getting some pushback. First, he said 44 cu in. fill in a 46 cu in. box wouldn't work (4s, 3.5d, where all the conductors land and includes the H20 switch and an outlet). He also said the conduit fill was exceeded. Per the Southwire calculator, I came up with a >20% fill (9 conductors in 3/4" PVC). He's backed off on those after I sent supporting documentation. Still bitching about the crowded box though...
The biggest hurdle is he's claiming we need to use 15A twins instead of 20A due to derating (I have one 20A twin already existing). The location gets 120F ambient temps during the summer (Colorado River, CA/AZ). He's claiming it will violate the NEC.
My Q is whether the 20A twins would violate the NEC based on the above. I can live with changing out the existing 20A to 15A, but am mostly curious if he's correct.
And, since I work with an engineering firm, I had one of the EEs vet the design and he didn't see any issues.
Thanks in advance.