Forum Discussion
myredracer
Jul 11, 2018Explorer II
westernrvparkowner wrote:Curios where you are finding this would comply with the 2017 edition (or any previous edition)? I see nothing in the latest NEC edition that has changed the demand factors for RV sites or anything else that would allow 20 or more 30 amp sites on a feeder or service (120 volt 2-wire).
Yes, there can be more than twenty 30 amp site on a single 200 amp circuit and still be in compliance with the most recent NEC requirements.
If you're talking a single 2-wire 120 volt feeder, 20 x 30 amp sites would be 30 amps x 20 sites x 0.45 demand factor (per table 551.73) = 270 amps. Unless it's a 3-wire balanced 120/240 volt feeder and up to 28 sites works on 200 amps.
*IF* the feeder was rated 270 amp tho., the chances of 20 RVs drawing less than 45% of the 30 amp rating of the RVs (= 13.5 amps) in total in the heat of summer is slim to none. The demand factor table is one thing in the NEC that is still waaay behind today's reality and why there is so much trouble.
Another problem is that the NEC considers loads that run less than 3 hours is considered a non-continuous load and there does not need to be a 25% safety factor on breakers or wires.
Interestingly, the NEC contains a little footnote that says the minimum calculated load for RV parks and the demand factors that can be applied may not work well for all types of campsites.
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