jar546
CBO
An industrial multi-building facility has its service at the rear of its main building and then provides 480Y/277-volt feeders to additional buildings behind the main building in order to segregate certain processes. The facility supplies its remote buildings through a partially enclosed access corridor that extends from the main switchboard rearward along a path that provides convenient access to services within 15 m (50 ft) of each additional building supplied. Two building feeders share a common raceway for approximately 45 m (150 ft) and run in the access corridor along with process steam and control and communications cabling. The steam raises the ambient temperature around the power raceway to as much as 35°C. At a tee fitting, the individual building feeders then run to each of the two buildings involved. The feeder neutrals are not connected to the equipment grounding conductors in the remote buildings. All distribution equipment terminations are listed as being suitable for 75°C connections.
Each of the two buildings has the following loads:
Calculated Load {Note: For reasonable precision, volt-ampere calculations are carried to three significant figures only; where loads are converted to amperes, the results are rounded to the nearest ampere [see 220.5(B)]}.
This is what they come up with as an example for us to follow:
Each of the two buildings has the following loads:
- Lighting, 11,600 VA, comprised of electric-discharge luminaires connected at 277 V
- Receptacles, 22 125-volt, 20-ampere receptacles on general-purpose branch circuits, supplied by separately derived systems in each of the buildings
- 1 Air compressor, 460 volt, three phase, 5 hp
- 1 Grinder, 460 volt, three phase, 1.5 hp
- 3 Welders, AC transformer type (nameplate: 23 amperes, 480 volts, 60 percent duty cycle)
- 3 Industrial Process Dryers, 480 volt, three phase, 15 kW each (assume continuous use throughout certain shifts)
Calculated Load {Note: For reasonable precision, volt-ampere calculations are carried to three significant figures only; where loads are converted to amperes, the results are rounded to the nearest ampere [see 220.5(B)]}.
This is what they come up with as an example for us to follow:
- Noncontinuous Loads: 38,886 VA
- Continuous Loads: 56,600 VA
- Total Load: 109,636 VA (with continuous loads adjusted)
- Current: 132 A
- Conductor Size: 1/0 AWG copper with XHHW-2 insulation.
- Overcurrent Protection: 150 A circuit breaker. - Would a 175A also be acceptable?
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