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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Electrical Myth - Wire Length Code - Short #155

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Careers, Business, Self-improvement, Education

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 18 October 2022

⏱️ 12 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast, Bryan covers a common electrical myth about wire length and its relationship with the National Electrical Code. The NEC is concerned with safety—protecting buildings and people—but less so with making sure things work.

Wire sizing is a common topic, and length is important because it can contribute to the voltage drop in a circuit. In many cases, we refer to the MCA (minimum circuit ampacity) to select an appropriate wire size. 

If you run more current through an undersized conductor, it gets hotter and will experience a voltage drop—though not proportionally. It's worth noting that nothing in the circuit is fixed; voltage, amperage, and resistance all follow Ohm's law but are variable as different things start happening in a circuit.

In many cases, the NEC generally doesn't require us to size conductors to accommodate for voltage drop. Conductors have some degree of resistance, so longer wires will result in a greater voltage drop than you would see in a shorter wire. It makes sense for the wire to overheat, but that won't happen because the greater resistance in the circuit will reduce the current. There is less work being done.

Longer wires and circuits that are sized correctly shouldn't overheat or present a safety issue. The NEC recommends but does not require voltage drop to stay below 5% across a conductor. That is a performance recommendation, not a safety concern. We need equipment to perform correctly, but NEC won't prevent electricians from setting up branch circuits that are longer than the ideal length. Excessively long branch circuits are common in commercial structures, and it's up to HVAC technicians to notice that and measure the voltage drop to make sure it's not negatively affecting the equipment. 

 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, this is the HVAC school podcast. I'm Brian. In this episode we're going to talk about

0:08.9

voltage shop and specifically about wire length, conductor length, which is a common misconception.

0:15.0

But before you do that, we want to thank our great sponsors.

0:18.8

carrier and carrier.com, diversitech at diversitect.com. Field controls can be found at field controls.

0:25.0

field controls can be found at field controls.com. Since 1927 field

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controls has been an HVAC leader in combustion and venting of residential heating appliances,

0:35.5

and an industry leader for indoor air quality solutions.

0:38.7

HVAC contractors can find out more about Field controls at field controls.com

0:43.8

slash contractor. Fieldpiece and fieldpiece dot com. Fieldpiece makes the

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entire suite of job link probes everything from monometers to index

0:53.0

accelerometers, line temperature clamps with rapid rail technology.

0:57.0

Once you use the field piece job link probes

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for checking the system, you're not going to go back

1:02.2

to anything else. It is what we use in our

1:04.1

company. We've been teaching it at the school and the students really love it. Even people who are

1:08.5

resistant to probes, even those who like typical analog-type gauges because it's what we're used to. I think

1:14.2

once you try them you're gonna love them that's the job link probes from fieldpiece

1:18.3

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Refrigeration Technologies makes so many great things for our industry,

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Nylon White works with gas and air and water,

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and it works great.

...

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