XXIII.       CONCLUSIONS
The  primary  goal  of  this  paper  was  to  describe  what  a 
Combination AFCI circuit breaker can do, while also clarifying 
what it can?t do.  The features of the Combination AFCI, and 
the earlier Branch/feeder AFCI, are listed in Table 1.  Neither 
provides series arc protection, the Branch/feeder provides the 
extra important feature of 30mA ground fault protection.
The  paper  goes  on  to  explain,  but  not  justify,  how  the 
Combination   AFCI   came   to   be   mandated,   while   the 
Branch/feeder  that  provides  more  protection  at  less  cost  is 
disallowed.    The  key  drivers  behind  this  were  the  AFCI 
manufacturers, their NEMA organization, and UL.  The author 
hopes  this  paper  will  stir  discussions  amongst  the  principals 
and  correct  any  errors  that  were  made  concerning  their 
products?  performance.    This  would  also  include  supporting 
removing the Combination AFCI mandate from the NATIONAL 
ELECTRICAL CODE (NFPA 70).
Finally,  the  author, having  participating  actively  during  the 
AFCI  development,  would  encourage  the  IEEE  engineering 
communities  of  these  great  institutions  to  become  more 
engaged to insure their codes and standards representatives 
fully   understand   the   technical  issues.      These   are   their 
products; they have a responsibility to insure their products are 
not inadvertently misrepresented.