So, i want to link two busbars. In the process i started looking at the BEP Marinco link bars.
baymarinesupply.com
I found data on another supplier that says each bar can handle 650 amps of current. I then started thinking about my busbars. I normally order them from suppliers according to the amperage description they sell them at and just order them according to what i need.
Now that i need to link a couple i started to get into the details a little bit more and discovered busbar calculators. I started playing around with them and punching in numbers that match busbars that i already own. For example, i have a BlueSeas 250 amp busbar, but if you enter the size of the bar into one of the calculators, the ampacity capability according to the calculators is quite a bit lower (193 Amps) than what BlueSeas specifies what they can carry. Likewise, i entered in the size specifications for a similar sized BEP busbar that claims 500 Amp carrying capacity and its nowhere near that.
I then discovered the copper development associations website.
www.copper.org
which has a table that shows a 1" x 1/4" busbar in a horizontal plane can carry 400 amps. Im assuming this table is more accurate, but i still am just starting to learn about this in detail. My question is why the discrepancy between the table and the calculators?
Reason i'd like to know is, i'd like to order a copper bar from McMaster Carr to join a 500 and 650 Amp busbars that can safely carry 400+ amps of current. Right now i have 1.375" wide X .25" thick silver plated copper bar selected. According to the table on the copper dev. assc. website its more than enough if i'm reading the table data correctly, but according to the calculators, its only capable of 250 amps. So, still a bit confused trying to figure this out, but want to make sure i dont undersize the link bar. Also, i wonder how the tiny BEP link bar can safely carry 650 amps? Its maybe .75" wide x .125" thick. Very confusing...

BEP Marinco Pro Installer Link Bars
SKU: BEP-LB Marinco Pro Installer Link Bars ModelsLB-1: 779-LB-1-BLB-2: 779-LB-2-BLBJ-2: 779-LBJ-2-BLBJ-3: 779-LBJ-3-B
Now that i need to link a couple i started to get into the details a little bit more and discovered busbar calculators. I started playing around with them and punching in numbers that match busbars that i already own. For example, i have a BlueSeas 250 amp busbar, but if you enter the size of the bar into one of the calculators, the ampacity capability according to the calculators is quite a bit lower (193 Amps) than what BlueSeas specifies what they can carry. Likewise, i entered in the size specifications for a similar sized BEP busbar that claims 500 Amp carrying capacity and its nowhere near that.
I then discovered the copper development associations website.
Electrical: Busbar - DC Copper Busbar Ampacities
The following tables have been provided by the Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions (ATIS), T1 Committee, and represent ampacities for busbar sizes and arrangements typically found in the telecommunications industry.

Reason i'd like to know is, i'd like to order a copper bar from McMaster Carr to join a 500 and 650 Amp busbars that can safely carry 400+ amps of current. Right now i have 1.375" wide X .25" thick silver plated copper bar selected. According to the table on the copper dev. assc. website its more than enough if i'm reading the table data correctly, but according to the calculators, its only capable of 250 amps. So, still a bit confused trying to figure this out, but want to make sure i dont undersize the link bar. Also, i wonder how the tiny BEP link bar can safely carry 650 amps? Its maybe .75" wide x .125" thick. Very confusing...