stickboy1375
Senior Member
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- Litchfield, CT
Just curious, Who has the honor of identifying a handle tie?
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The AHJ makes the call. It is my opinion that the AHJ could(most likely won't, but could) say that the nail or screw is "identified for the purpose". In some cases the nail or screw will make a better handle tie than those sold by the manufacturer.Identified (as applied to equipment). Recognizable as suitable for the specific purpose, function, use, environment, application, and so forth, where described in a particular Code requirement.
FPN: Some examples of ways to determine suitability of equipment for a specific purpose, environment, or application include investigations by a qualified testing laboratory (listing and labeling), an inspection agency, or other organizations concerned with product evaluation.
don_resqcapt19 said:The AHJ makes the call. It is my opinion that the AHJ could(most likely won't, but could) say that the nail or screw is "identified for the purpose". In some cases the nail or screw will make a better handle tie than those sold by the manufacturer.
Don
I don't see it that way...just a different interpretation of the rule.I just love the fact that some of the things Mike Holt says are a little twisted in truth...
Yes it was, but they used the word identified and as I said before that does not actually require it to be identified by an outside agency...it does strongly imply that but still leaves it open for the AHJ to "indentify" nails or screws. If they really wanted to prevent that, then they should have used the word "listed". Just another example of code wording not matching code intent.I'm too lazy to look at the moment, but wasn't getting rid of nails as a handle tie one of the stated objectives of the proposal that changed it?
don_resqcapt19 said:I don't see it that way...just a different interpretation of the rule.
Don
georgestolz said:Stick, whose statement do you take to be absolutely perfect? Mike Holt's material may differ from the NEC Handbook produced by the NFPA, which could vary from Tom Henry's, from the American Electrician's Handbook, from Soares book, from Larry Bobo's, from RBJ's, from Karl Riley's, from my Pop-Up Handbook (due on bookshelves soon).
I think it's kind of a given that errors and omissions (and interpretations) come with the territory when you buy a Handbook about the NEC, don't you think?