Installation Electrical

3.If the unit has a electric heat: power and ground connections are inside the electric heat control box, connected to a non-fused disconnect switch or terminal block.

Electrical Grounding Restrictions

WARNING

Hazardous Voltage!

Disconnect all electric power, including remote disconnects before servicing. Follow proper lockout/tagout procedures to ensure the power can not be inadvertently energized. Failure to disconnect power before servicing could result in death or serious injury.

All sensor and input circuits are normally at or near ground (common) potential. When wiring sensors and other input devices to the Tracer™ ZN controller, avoid creating ground loops with grounded conductors external to the unit control circuit. Ground loops can affect the measurement accuracy of the controller.

Note: Unit transformer IT1 provides power to the blower coil unit only and is not intended for field connections. Field connections to the transformer IT1 may cause immediate or premature unit component failure.

All input/output circuits (except isolated relay contacts and optically-isolated inputs) assume a grounded source, either a ground wire at the supply transformer to control panel chassis, or an installer supplied ground.

Note: Do not connect any sensor or input circuit to an external ground connection.

The installer must provide interconnection wiring to connect wall mounted devices such as a zone sensor module. Refer to the unit wiring schematic for specific wiring details and point-to-point wiring connections. Dashed lines indicate field wiring on the unit wiring schematics. All interconnection wiring must conform to NEC Class 2 wiring requirements and any state and local requirements. Refer to Table 12 for the wire size range and maximum wiring distance for each device.

Table 12. Zone sensor maximum wiring distances, ft (m)

Wire size range

Max. wiring distance

 

 

16–22 AWG

200 (60.96)

 

 

Note: Do not bundle or run interconnection wiring in parallel with or in the same conduit with any high voltage wires (110V or greater). Exposure of interconnection wiring to high voltage wiring, inductive loads, or RF transmitters may cause radio frequency interference (RFI). In addition, improper separation may cause electrical noise problems. Therefore, use shielded wire (Beldon 83559/83562 or equivalent) in applications that require a high degree of noise immunity. Connect the shield to the chassis ground and tape at the other end.

Minimum Circuit Ampacity (MCA) and Maximum Fuse Size (MFS) Calculations for Units with Electric Heat

Use these formulas to calculate the MCA and MFS.

Heater amps = (heater kW x 1000)/heater voltage

Note: Use 120V heater voltage for 115V units. Use 240V heater voltage for 230V units. Use 480V heater voltage for 460V units. Use 600V heater voltage for 575V units.

MCA = 1.25 x (heater amps + all motor FLAs)

MFS or HACR type circuit breaker = (2.25 x largest motor FLA) + second motor FLA + heater amps (if applicable)

HACR (Heating, Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration) type circuit breakers are required in the branch circuit wiring for all units with electric heat.

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Trane BCXC-SVX01B-EN, BCVC, BCHC manual Electrical Grounding Restrictions Hazardous Voltage, Installation Electrical