Free Standing Mech Equip

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Alwayslearningelec

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Anyone happen to have pic of a piece of free standing floor mounted mech equipment feed from above. Curious about support from ceiling down to equipment. Think there some some of strut structure. Thanks.
 
It depends on the situation and how far down the wire must be to reach the JB. Also where is the unit, crawl space, ceiling in a closet etc. Sometimes we strap to the unit or nail a board to the floor joist above (in crawl areas) or sometimes you have to drop to the floor with a floor flange
 
Anyone happen to have pic of a piece of free standing floor mounted mech equipment feed from above. Curious about support from ceiling down to equipment. Think there some some of strut structure. Thanks.
You can go 5 ft for securely fastened. I believe there are also some exceptions for threaded rigid conduit.

You can just drop it down with a 5/8 threaded rod and fasten the conduit to the rod.

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Isn't 'free standing' and 'floor mounted' contradictory?
It's common for those to be interchangeable in the control panel world. Just differentiates from 'wall-mounted'.

Google "free standing enclosures"

Then Google "floor mounted enclosures"

You'll see basically the same thing.
 
It's common for those to be interchangeable in the control panel world. Just differentiates from 'wall-mounted'.

Google "free standing enclosures"

Then Google "floor mounted enclosures"

You'll see basically the same thing.
Well it's a misnomer then. What we were wondering was if thr thing can be moved after installation without removing any mounting hardware.

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That does not make them the same thing. People put too much value on the Word of Google.
I'm not referring to what google says. I'm referring to what the manufacturers call them. These happen to be the first two links after the ads when you search what I said in google. What one manufacturer calls "free standing", another calls "floor mount". I agree it does seem to be contradictory, but not if you are differentiating it from something like wall-mount.


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I'm not referring to what google says. I'm referring to what the manufacturers call them. These happen to be the first two links after the ads when you search what I said in google. What one manufacturer calls "free standing", another calls "floor mount". I agree it does seem to be contradictory, but not if you are differentiating it from something like wall-mount.


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Perhaps they mean free standing because they're not mounted to the wall. But it's all good we've clarified the situation.

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I'm not referring to what google says. I'm referring to what the manufacturers call them. These happen to be the first two links after the ads when you search what I said in google. What one manufacturer calls "free standing", another calls "floor mount". I agree it does seem to be contradictory, but not if you are differentiating it from something like wall-mount.


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I see that Floor Mount and Free Standing are separate categories. I also appears that 'Floor Mount' is a feature. I wish you would have put a working link to this for lazy people like me.
 
I don't see that it's clarified yet, or there wouldn't be separate categories for Floor Mounted and Free Standing.
I meant we've clarified that his particular device is something that is going to be bolted to the floor and thus not moveable after installation. I don't care to argue the manufacturers choice of words.

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For portable equipment and fixed equipment out in the middle of the floor. I normally use bus drop cable and support hardware, if the size isn't too big.
I normally leave a loop at the top so that it can be relocated a bit if necessary.
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Sky-ty Tension Cable Mount.jpg

Twist-lock Drop.jpg

PendantDrop1.jpg

Bus Drop Cable.jpg
 
For portable equipment and fixed equipment out in the middle of the floor. I normally use bus drop cable and support hardware, if the size isn't too big.
I normally leave a loop at the top so that it can be relocated a bit if necessary.
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Nice solution. I like it. I've often used extra hard usage SO with a strain relief.

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