TN LLE Exam Preparation Study Guide: NEC Articles, Conductor Sizing, and Fault Current
Complete TN LLE exam preparation study guide covering NEC articles, conductor sizing, ampacity tables, fault current calculations, and OCPD ratings for the Tennessee electrician exam in 2026.

TN LLE Exam Preparation Study Guide: NEC Articles, Conductor Sizing, and Fault Current
Passing the Tennessee Limited Licensed Electrician (LLE) exam requires thorough preparation across multiple NEC code sections, practical conductor sizing skills, and a solid understanding of fault current calculations. This study guide breaks down the most critical exam topics, provides study strategies for each NEC article area, and gives you a structured timeline to prepare effectively.
The TN LLE exam is an open-book test that allows you to reference the NEC codebook during the exam. While this might sound like an advantage, the exam is designed so that candidates who cannot navigate the code efficiently will run out of time. Success depends on knowing where to find answers quickly, understanding how NEC articles connect to each other, and being able to apply code requirements to practical electrical scenarios. This study guide focuses on the three areas that carry the most weight on the exam: NEC article navigation, conductor sizing and ampacity, and fault current with overcurrent protection.
TN LLE Exam Prep Essentials
- Exam type: Open-book, multiple-choice
- Primary reference: National Electrical Code (current adopted edition)
- Most tested article: Article 250 — Grounding and Bonding
- Critical tables: Table 310.16 (conductor ampacity), Table 220.12 (general lighting loads), Table 250.66 (grounding electrode conductors)
- Calculation focus: Residential load calculations, conductor sizing, fault current, voltage drop
- Recommended study time: 6-10 weeks with 8-12 hours per week
- Top strategy: Practice NEC lookups under timed conditions — speed matters on test day
Critical NEC Articles for the TN LLE Exam
The TN LLE exam draws questions from across the entire National Electrical Code, but certain articles carry disproportionate weight. Mastering these sections gives you the strongest foundation for passing.
Article 250 — Grounding and Bonding
Article 250 is consistently the most heavily tested section on the LLE exam. This article covers the grounding and bonding requirements for electrical systems and equipment. Key concepts you must understand include:
- Grounding electrode system (250.50): What constitutes a grounding electrode, which electrodes must be connected, and the requirements for supplemental grounding electrodes. Know the difference between a grounding electrode conductor and an equipment grounding conductor.
- Grounding electrode conductor sizing (Table 250.66): This table appears on nearly every LLE exam. You must be able to determine the correct grounding electrode conductor size based on the largest ungrounded service-entrance conductor or equivalent area.
- Equipment grounding conductor sizing (Table 250.122): Selecting the correct equipment grounding conductor based on the rating of the overcurrent device protecting the circuit.
- Bonding requirements (250.90-250.106): Bonding of water pipes, structural steel, and other metallic systems to the grounding electrode system.
- System grounding (250.20-250.36): Which systems are required to be grounded, the location of grounding connections, and the rules for grounded (neutral) conductors.
Articles 210 and 220 — Branch Circuits and Load Calculations
These two articles form the backbone of residential electrical design and are heavily tested on the LLE exam:
- Branch circuit ratings (210.3-210.25): Requirements for 15A, 20A, 30A, 40A, and 50A branch circuits, including conductor sizing, overcurrent protection, and outlet device ratings.
- Required outlets (210.52): Spacing requirements for receptacle outlets in dwelling units — the 6-foot/12-foot rule for wall space, countertop receptacle spacing, and required outlets in bathrooms, garages, and outdoor locations.
- GFCI and AFCI requirements (210.8, 210.12): Which locations require GFCI protection and which require AFCI protection in dwelling units. These requirements change with each NEC edition, so verify you are studying the currently adopted code.
- Residential load calculations (220.40-220.87): The standard and optional methods for calculating residential service loads. You must be able to calculate the total connected load, apply demand factors from Table 220.42 and Table 220.55, and determine the required service size. These calculation questions appear on every LLE exam.
Articles 230 and 240 — Services and Overcurrent Protection
These articles govern how electrical service enters a building and how circuits are protected:
- Service entrance requirements (230.70): Location, marking, and accessibility of the service disconnecting means.
- Overhead and underground services (230.24, 230.49): Clearance requirements for overhead service conductors and installation requirements for underground service laterals.
- Overcurrent device ratings (240.4, 240.6): Standard ampere ratings for fuses and circuit breakers, and the rules for matching OCPD ratings to conductor ampacity.
- Small conductor protection (240.4(D)): Special rules for overcurrent protection of 14 AWG, 12 AWG, and 10 AWG conductors — these specific rules are frequently tested.
Article 300 and Wiring Method Articles (310, 334, 338, 344)
Wiring methods and conductor requirements form a significant portion of the exam:
- Protection against physical damage (300.4): Requirements for protecting cables and conductors where they pass through framing members — nail plates, bushings, and minimum depth requirements.
- Conductor types and ampacities (310.16): Table 310.16 is the single most referenced table on the LLE exam. Know how to read it for different conductor types (THHN, THWN, NM), temperature columns, and how to apply correction and adjustment factors.
- NM cable installation (334.10-334.80): Where NM cable can and cannot be used, support and securing requirements, and the number of conductors allowed through bored holes.
Conductor Sizing and Ampacity Tables
Conductor sizing questions appear throughout the TN LLE exam and require you to navigate multiple NEC tables and apply correction factors accurately. This is one of the areas where candidates lose the most points, so mastering it gives you a significant advantage.
Understanding Table 310.16
Table 310.16 (Allowable Ampacities of Insulated Conductors) is your primary tool for determining conductor sizes. The table provides ampacity values for conductors at different temperature ratings (60°C, 75°C, and 90°C) in copper and aluminum. Key points for the exam:
- Temperature column selection: The temperature rating of the conductor insulation AND the temperature rating of the termination determine which column you use. For most residential applications with standard equipment rated at 60°C or 75°C, you cannot use the full 90°C ampacity of THHN conductor — you must derate to the termination temperature rating.
- Copper vs. aluminum: The table lists separate values for copper and aluminum conductors. Aluminum conductors have lower ampacity for the same wire size, requiring larger conductors to carry the same current.
- Common sizes to memorize: While the exam is open-book, knowing the ampacities of common conductor sizes saves critical time. For example: 14 AWG copper at 60°C = 15A, 12 AWG = 20A, 10 AWG = 30A, 8 AWG = 40A, 6 AWG = 55A.
Ampacity Correction and Adjustment Factors
The exam frequently tests your ability to apply correction and adjustment factors to base ampacity values:
- Temperature correction (310.15(B)(1)): When ambient temperature exceeds 30°C (86°F), you must apply correction factors that reduce the allowable ampacity. The correction factors are found in Table 310.15(B)(1). For Tennessee installations in unconditioned attic spaces or outdoor enclosures during summer, this correction is common in exam scenarios.
- Bundling adjustment (310.15(C)(1)): When more than three current-carrying conductors are installed in a raceway or cable, the ampacity must be adjusted downward. For four to six conductors, the adjustment factor is 80%. For seven to nine conductors, it is 70%. These factors can stack with temperature corrections, significantly reducing the final allowable ampacity.
- Applying both factors: When both temperature correction and bundling adjustment apply, multiply the base ampacity by both factors. For example: a 10 AWG THHN conductor (base ampacity 40A at 90°C) in a conduit with six current-carrying conductors in an ambient temperature of 40°C would be adjusted for both bundling (80%) and temperature, potentially reducing the allowable ampacity well below the base value.
Voltage Drop Calculations
While not an NEC requirement (the NEC provides recommendations in informational notes rather than mandatory rules), voltage drop calculations appear on the LLE exam. The standard recommendation is no more than 3% voltage drop on a branch circuit and no more than 5% total from the service entrance to the final outlet. The voltage drop formula involves conductor resistance, circuit length, and load current. Practice these calculations to build speed and accuracy.
Sharpen your conductor sizing skills with our Conductors and Cables practice quiz, which presents the same types of ampacity table lookups and correction factor calculations that appear on the TN LLE exam.
Fault Current Calculations and OCPD Selection
Fault current and overcurrent protective device (OCPD) selection questions on the TN LLE exam test your understanding of how electrical systems respond to short circuits and ground faults, and how protective devices must be rated to safely interrupt these currents.
What Is Fault Current?
Fault current is the abnormally high current that flows when an unintended path is created in an electrical circuit — such as a short circuit between two conductors or a ground fault between a conductor and a grounded surface. The magnitude of available fault current depends on the utility transformer size and impedance, the length and size of conductors between the transformer and the point of fault, and the impedance of all connections in the circuit path.
Why Fault Current Matters for the LLE
Every overcurrent protective device (circuit breaker or fuse) has an interrupting rating — the maximum fault current it can safely clear without damage. NEC Section 110.9 requires that OCPDs be rated to interrupt the available fault current at their installed location. If a circuit breaker with a 10,000A interrupting rating is installed where the available fault current is 15,000A, the breaker may not be able to safely clear the fault, potentially causing an arc flash, fire, or explosion. The LLE exam tests your ability to verify that OCPD interrupting ratings are adequate for the installation.
Calculating Available Fault Current
The exam presents fault current scenarios at a residential level. Key concepts include:
- Utility transformer contribution: The utility transformer is the primary source of fault current. Larger transformers and lower impedance transformers produce higher available fault current. The exam may provide transformer kVA and impedance values for calculation.
- Conductor impedance reduction: As fault current travels through conductors from the transformer to the point of use, conductor impedance reduces the available fault current. Longer conductor runs and smaller conductors create more impedance, reducing fault current at downstream locations.
- Point-of-use fault current: The available fault current at any point in the system is always less than or equal to the fault current at the service entrance. The farther from the transformer, the lower the available fault current.
OCPD Selection Rules
Selecting the correct overcurrent protective device involves matching multiple requirements:
- Ampere rating (240.4): The OCPD must protect the conductor by having a rating that does not exceed the conductor's ampacity (with specific exceptions for motor circuits and certain other loads).
- Standard sizes (240.6): The NEC specifies standard ampere ratings for fuses and circuit breakers: 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100A, and so on. When the calculated load does not correspond to a standard size, you generally go to the next higher standard size if the conductor ampacity allows it.
- Interrupting rating (110.9): The OCPD must have an interrupting rating sufficient for the available fault current at its point of installation. Standard residential circuit breakers typically have a 10,000A interrupting rating, which is adequate for most residential installations but may not be sufficient in locations close to large utility transformers.
- Series rating: In some cases, a combination of upstream and downstream OCPDs can be series-rated to provide adequate interrupting capacity even when the downstream device alone would be inadequate. The LLE exam may include questions on this concept.
Practice fault current scenarios with our Fault Current and OCPD Ratings practice quiz, which presents calculation-based questions that mirror the types of problems you will see on the TN LLE exam.
Study Timeline and Exam Day Tips
A structured study plan is essential for TN LLE exam success. The open-book format rewards candidates who can navigate the NEC quickly and apply code requirements accurately under time pressure.
Recommended Study Timeline: 8 Weeks
| Week | Focus Area | Activities |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | NEC Organization and Navigation | Learn the NEC structure: chapters, articles, parts, sections. Practice using the Table of Contents and Index to find information quickly. Tab your codebook on critical articles. Take a baseline practice test to identify weak areas. |
| Week 2 | Article 250 — Grounding and Bonding | Study grounding electrode systems, grounding electrode conductor sizing (Table 250.66), equipment grounding conductors (Table 250.122), bonding requirements. This is the most tested article — spend extra time here. |
| Week 3 | Articles 210 and 220 — Branch Circuits and Load Calculations | Study branch circuit requirements, receptacle spacing rules, GFCI/AFCI locations. Practice residential load calculations using both standard and optional methods. Work through calculation examples in NEC Annex D. |
| Week 4 | Articles 230 and 240 — Services and Overcurrent Protection | Study service entrance requirements, OCPD ratings, conductor protection rules. Practice matching OCPD sizes to conductor ampacities. Study fault current concepts and interrupting ratings. |
| Week 5 | Articles 300, 310, 334 — Wiring Methods and Conductors | Master Table 310.16 and ampacity correction/adjustment factors. Study NM cable rules, conduit fill calculations, and conductor protection requirements. Practice multi-step conductor sizing problems. |
| Week 6 | Remaining Articles and Tennessee-Specific Rules | Study Articles 404, 406, 408, 422 (appliances), and 440 (HVAC). Review Tennessee-specific licensing regulations and any state amendments to the NEC. |
| Week 7 | Practice Tests and Weak Area Review | Take two full-length timed practice exams. Review every question — right and wrong. Identify your three weakest topic areas and study them intensively. Practice NEC lookups under time pressure. |
| Week 8 | Final Review and Exam Simulation | Take a final full-length practice test under realistic conditions (timed, open-book). Quick review of Article 250 and load calculations. Verify your NEC tabs are in place. Light study only in the final two days. |
Exam Day Tips
- Arrive early: Get to the testing center at least 30 minutes before your scheduled time. Check-in procedures include identity verification and a review of your NEC codebook to ensure it meets the clean-copy requirements.
- Bring the right materials: Your NEC codebook (clean copy with publisher tabs only), two forms of valid identification, your exam confirmation, and a basic calculator if permitted by the testing center.
- Start with what you know: Answer the questions you are confident about first. Flag difficult questions and return to them after completing the easier ones. This builds confidence and ensures you collect all available points before tackling harder problems.
- Use your codebook strategically: Do not look up every answer — for questions you know from memory, answer immediately and move on. Save your codebook time for questions that require specific code references, table lookups, or calculations.
- Watch for trick questions: The exam tests not just whether you can find the right code section but whether you apply it correctly. Read questions carefully, paying attention to words like "minimum," "maximum," "required," and "permitted." These words change the correct answer significantly.
- Manage your time: Check your progress at the one-third and two-thirds marks. If you are falling behind, pick up the pace on straightforward questions and flag the more complex calculation problems for later.