This article was posted 10/27/2006 and is most likely outdated.

Article 210 Branch Circuits 210.5
 

 
Subject - Article 210 Branch Circuits 210.5

October 27, 2006  

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Branch Circuits

210.5 Identification for Branch Circuits

The requirement for branch-circuit identification was relocated from 210.4(D) to 210.5(C) and the text expanded to require circuit identification for all circuits, not just those that are multiwire.
(C) Ungrounded Conductors. Where the premises wiring system contains branch circuits supplied from more than one voltage system, each ungrounded conductor, where accessible, must be identified by system. Identification can be by color-coding, marking tape, tagging, or other means approved by the authority having jurisdiction. Such identification must be permanently posted at each branch-circuit panelboard or branch-circuit distribution equipment. Figure 210-3

Author’s Comment: Electricians often use the following color system for power and lighting conductor identification:
  • 120/240V single-phase: black, red and white
  • 120/208V three-phase: black, red, blue and white
  • 120/240V three-phase: black, orange, blue and white
  • 277/480V three-phase: brown, orange, yellow and gray, or brown, purple, yellow and gray





Figure 210-3
(Click on image to enlarge)

       

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Comments
  • I have also encountered a 240 volts corner grounded system in Akron, Ohio where the color coding was black, red, blue and the blue phase was the grounded phase because the neutral bar in the main fusible switch was on the right. I told a member of IBEW to think of it as a British corner grounded system. For a long time in England blue was neutral on commercial and industrial systems and black was neutral in residential systems. They changed that a few years ago so that all new residential wiring uses blue as the neutral. Iraq seems to like to use black for the neutral - the British version of romex looks a lot like our rubber cords and in previous tradition used black for neutral.

    On of the U.S. manufacturers of MC cable offers cable with the brown, purple, yellow, slate color code - this avoids conflict with the color code for 4-wire delta systems. 120/240 4-wire delta is a good voltage for running \"toys\" in an otherwise 480 volt factory.

    Oh, electromechanical demand meters used the A phase to power demand metering clocks and other accessories. In a form 15S meter for 4-wire delta systems the left stator metered the 2 low legs and the right stator metered the high leg. The newer 16S/17S and 8S/9S fits multiple voltages and phases meters still use this convention and will alarm service error if the high leg is not on the C phase. This is to maintain backwards compatibility in case an electromechanical meter needs to be temporarily installed if say an a kid\'s baseball knocks an electronic meter out of the socket.

    Curiously, though, one make of electronic meters uses the C phase to power the electronics rather than the A phase that everybody else uses.

    Mike Cole, mc5w at earthlink dot net

    Michael R.Cole

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