Box Fill Calculator for South Carolina

NEC 2017 box fill math for EV charger installers working in South Carolina.

Every EVSE installation in South Carolina eventually hits a junction or device box — disconnects, splice points, pull boxes — all of which must satisfy NEC 2017 Article 314.16 fill rules.

Worked example for South Carolina

A 4-11/16" square × 2-1/8" deep box has a 42.0 in³ volume. Each #6 Cu conductor counts as 5.0 in³. With a 2-conductor + EGC EVSE branch landing in the box plus a device, you consume roughly 15-20 in³, leaving plenty of headroom — but a 60 A multi-port pull box can fill quickly with #4 or #2 AWG conductors.

Code & Utilities

The applicable code in South Carolina is the NEC 2017, which the state adopted in 2018. That includes Article 625 EVSE rules and the 125% continuous-load factor on charging branch circuits, though some 2020-cycle changes (like expanded EMS provisions) are not yet enforced statewide.

Major electric utilities serving South Carolina include Duke Energy Carolinas SC, Dominion Energy South Carolina, Santee Cooper. Their make-ready, time-of-use, and demand-charge structures vary widely; pull the specific tariff before sizing service equipment.

Climate & Ampacity

South Carolina's representative summer design ambient is around 94°F, which yields a 0.88× ampacity correction factor at 75°C terminations per NEC 310.15(B)(1). Because the correction is below 0.9, conductors that "look fine" on a 30°C ampacity table will not carry their nameplate current here — always derate explicitly.

South Carolina takeaway

Always run box-fill math when the EVSE disconnect lives more than a few inches from the unit itself — that intermediate junction is where South Carolina inspectors most often catch fill violations.