Re: AFCI confusion
Charlie B.
Your description of a dimmer as a voltage control applies to rheostats and full wave dimmers used on magnetic transformers. A common silicon dimmer of the 125 volt 600 watt flavor acts more as a switch, cycling on and off 120 times a second limiting the power let through to the lamp. Energy over time available at the lamp is what determines the intensity of the glow.
The timing of the dimmer is regulated by the manual setting of an electronic trigger circuit. After that manual adjustment, the dimmer electronics use the electrical energy available from the wiring system to operate automatically, electronically.
For the portion of a half cycle that the dimmer is not supplying full voltage to the lamp, the dimmer has full voltage across itself.
For the portion of a half cycle that the dimmer is ON, the lamp has full voltage across itself.
Both the lamp and the dimmer operate at full voltage. . .just not simultaneously.
The electronic purpose of the circuit of the dimmer is to limit the power dissipated at the filament of the lamp. The circuit has to use electric energy to operate.
I know I'm going on and on in this thread. I apologize for any misunderstanding that I'm creating. Please call me on it. I'm trying to be as dispassionate as I can. Charlie, I greatly appreciate your sparring with me over this interpretation. I have, until I started in on this thread, been very happy to use the exception of a switch as something that, by itself, does not fall under the purview of 210.12(B).
I love the freedom to wire the back yard light on a non-AFCI circuit and to be able to put the switch (with a dimmer) inside the bedroom. But the definitions of outlet and utilization equipment rather clearly seem to be saying otherwise, to my dismay.
That said: I repost the Article 100 Definitions:
Outlet. A point on the wiring system at which current is taken to supply utilization equipment.
NECH - An example is a lighting outlet or a receptacle outlet.
Utilization Equipment. Equipment that utilizes electric energy for electronic, electromechanical, chemical, heating, lighting, or similar purposes.
Nothing in the definitions limits the idea of
taking of current to be
in parallel with the wiring system only.
Nothing in the definitions specifies the voltage that is to be across an equipment before it will become
utilization equipment.
Nothing in the difinitions specifies the amount of electric energy that is utilized before the equipment becomes utilization equipment,
just that electric energy of any amount is utilized.
[ April 02, 2004, 03:13 PM: Message edited by: al hildenbrand ]