Wood inside of a junction box

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Hoffman offers plywood back panels. Just saying.


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Augie was ahead of me on this. Common for telephone. Back in the day I would look in the Hoffman catalog to see about the details and listing data, but no more catalogs for me.
 
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I have seen three phase utility CT cabinets with wooden backplates.
 
There is a difference between a wireway which does not come with the wood back option and a CT can which may have. The issue is that the terminal blocks inside the wire we are required to have insulating covers as pointed out in the second post.
I don’t know if a CT can with a wood backboard is allowed by the NEC, as often the CT scan requirements are dictated by the power utility.
 
Now where will I find that, it's not in article 100 of the NEC.............. I checked....
They have their own article, 366. I will defend your use of the word "gutter" because that is common jargon for a wireway and usually not meant to refer to an actual "auxiliary gutter". Just like when we say THHN, we typically don't mean actual THHN that is dry location only.
 
But I didn't say Auxillary . Not even once. Wanna know what else? I've read Chapter 3 at least 500 times over, since I got done with Vocational school back in 1976. If I meant " Auxillary Gutter", I would have said that. But I meant what I said cause that is the name which I can always buy that exact "thingamajig" showing in the picture at the wholesale houses, both here and in several cities in Florida I have worked in. I ask for a gutter and I get a " Wireway". Sometimes I ask for Romex and I get NM cable. But calling a six foot by 24" Gutter a junction box is something an electrical engineer might do, but just about never an electrician. Anyway, that picture is going to ruin my Alaska vacation now that I know how they splice things up there.........
 
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