Does the code not permit 15a receptacles on a 20a circuit in a comemrcial setting?

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bgelectric

Senior Member
agreed

agreed

This is what I had figured but was second guessing myself.
I guess its because its spec'd out almost always in commercial buildings and after sometime by habit I think its code.
Thanks guys!
 

Cavie

Senior Member
Location
SW Florida
Has anyone ever seen the word commercial used in the NEC? Sorry, I couldn't help myself. I guess that could be a whole thread in it'self.
 

Smart $

Esteemed Member
Location
Ohio
Has anyone ever seen the word commercial used in the NEC? Sorry, I couldn't help myself. I guess that could be a whole thread in it'self.
Actually yes... several times. For starters:

511 Commercial Garages, Repair and Storage
220.56 commercial kitchen equipment
225.7 oudoor lighting equipment 277V to ground
225.18 & 230.24 clearance of overhead conductors
225.19 & 230.9 clearance from building openings
multiple occurences in Article 250
and so on
 

Cavie

Senior Member
Location
SW Florida
Actually yes... several times. For starters:

511 Commercial Garages, Repair and Storage
220.56 commercial kitchen equipment
225.7 outdoor lighting equipment 277V to ground
225.18 & 230.24 clearance of overhead conductors
225.19 & 230.9 clearance from building openings
multiple occurrences in Article 250
and so on

My bad.:ashamed: I just get agitated when "Engineered requirements" somehow get embedded in the NEC in places where I can't read them.:?
 

infinity

Moderator
Staff member
Location
New Jersey
Occupation
Journeyman Electrician
I know a guy in northern nj that got flagged for 15Amp rec on a 20 amp circuit

Unless it was a single 15 amp receptacle on an 20 amp individual branch circuit that inspector needs a refresher course. :roll:

I was tempted to ask what town.
 

cowboyjwc

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Simi Valley, CA
Give us a link for pre-orders. :D

:thumbsup:

I'm also goning to combine it with my other book, "The 100 top excuses used by contractors".

This will actuall be a reference book, so instead of having to go through the whole story with the inspcetor, you can simply tell them, "this is a #6.":roll:
 
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