I recieved this information for a NEMA 4 dry-type transformer I required for a particular application, and was concerned the enclosure will end up essentially being an enclosed box that will just bake my cables.

Quote
[Our company] designs enclosed transformers to have a maximum enclosure temperature of 65C above ambient for readily accessible parts and a maximum temperature rise of 80C for not readily accessible parts per IEEE 57.12.01.


If 115° and 150°C rise and hotter are common ratings for transformers, how in the world is this reconciled with 90°C rated cables?

I'm having difficulty finding any solid information about this. Am I worried over nothing, will the cables wick away the heat fast enough that it's not an issue? I don't mind derating cabling, but it's difficult to derate a 90C cable for 120C ambient conditions. If I go strictly by NEC, I know I can ignore this because it's less than 2' at the end of the cable, but it still worries the hell out of me. What's the standard way to terminate to a NEMA 4 transformer?