680.26 TIA

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ryan_618

Senior Member
I didn't see that anyone else has posted the new TIA to the 2005 version of 680.26, so here it is:

Reference: 680.26 TIA 05-2 (NFPA 70) (SC 05-7-15)/Log No. 821) Pursuant to Section 5 of the NFPA Regulations Governing Committee Projects, the National Fire Protection Association has issued the following Tentative Interim Amendment to NFPA 70, National Electrical Code?, 2005 edition. The TIA was processed by the National Electrical Code? Committee, and was issued by the Standards Council on July 29, 2005, with an effective date of August 18, 2005. A Tentative Interim Amendment is tentative because it has not been processed through the entire standards-making procedures. It is interim because it is effective only between editions of the standard. A TIA automatically becomes a proposal of the proponent for the next edition of the standard; as such, it then is subject to all of the procedures of the standards-making process.

1. Revise 680.26 (C) & 680.26 (C)(1) as follows: (C) Equipotential Bonding Grid. The parts specified in 680.26(B) shall be connected to an equipotential bonding grid with a solid copper conductor, insulated, covered, or bare, not smaller than 8 AWG or rigid metal conduit of brass or other identified corrosion-resistant metal conduit. Connection shall be made by exothermic welding or by listed pressure connectors or clamps that are labeled as being suitable for the purpose and are of stainless steel, brass, copper, or copper alloy. The equipotential bonding grid shall conform to the contours of the pool and shall extend within or under paved walking surfaces for 1 m (3 ft) horizontally beyond the inside walls of the pool and shall be permitted to be any of the following: Exception: The equipotential bonding grid shall not be required to be installed under the bottom of or vertically along the walls of vinyl lined polymer wall, fiberglass composite, or other pools constructed of nonconductive materials. Any metal parts of the pool, including metal structural supports, shall be bonded in accordance with 680.26(B). For the purposes of this section, poured concrete, pneumatically applied (sprayed) concrete, and concrete block, with painted or plastered coatings, shall be considered conductive material. (1) Structural Reinforcing Steel. The structural reinforcing steel of a concrete pool or deck where the reinforcing rods are bonded together by the usual steel tie wires or the equivalent. Where deck reinforcing steel is not an integral part of the pool, the deck reinforcing steel shall be bonded to other parts of the bonding grid using a minimum 8 AWG solid copper conductor. Connection shall be per 680.26(D).

Copyright ? 2005 All Rights Reserved NATIONAL FIRE PROTECTION ASSOCIATION

[ August 08, 2005, 12:32 PM: Message edited by: ryan_618 ]
 

infinity

Moderator
Staff member
Location
New Jersey
Occupation
Journeyman Electrician
Re: 680.26 TIA

Ryan,

Thanks for the TIA. Would you care to share your opinion as to what this means and how it is applied?


Trevor
 

pierre

Senior Member
Re: 680.26 TIA

Thanks Ryan!!!

The one key change that I see here is the bonding grid will not be required to be installed under the pool or along the vertical walls of the pool. That is a great relief.

I wonder how many people have installed the grid under the pool this summer?
 

ryan_618

Senior Member
Re: 680.26 TIA

You're very welcome guys.

It seems to me that the key changes are:

1) addressing non-conductive pools and not require a bonding grid for them where it would serve no purpose.
2) permitting the grid of structural metal to extend within the deck, instead of just under it (which I think was simply an oversight of the CMP).
3) addressing conductive pools vs. non-conductive pools.

Ryan
 

shortcircuit2

Senior Member
Location
South of Bawstin
Re: 680.26 TIA

I have some questions about this TIA...

1) They have revised 680.26(C) and 680.26(C)(1) but, do 680.26(C)(2) and 680.26(C)(3) remain in the code as written?

2) They do not describe what the equipotential bonding grid is to be constructed of?

3) Is the reinforcing wire mesh that is installed in many concrete deck pours an acceptable bonding grid?

shortcircuit2
 
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