goldstar
Senior Member
- Location
- New Jersey
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
You are correct. IF is, in many cases, one of the largest words in the English language. Please bear with me on this - IF jwelectric had never brought the UL White Book to the attention of this Forum, would you or anyone else here have known about UL-FTCN ? (BTW, I'm not bashing jwelectric for bringing this up AGAIN. We've been friendly adversaries for years here in the Forum). But, it's apparent that generator manufacturers are not aware of this section because they are pushing product out the door in record #'s. I carry the NEC book in my work van with me at all times. But, I do not carry the UL White book or any other Code reference book. If I did I'd need a library section set off to the side of the truck.I understand what you are saying but it is all rhetorical. IF is probably the largest word in our language. What IF this, what IF that. IF I turned down the job because I could not follow the code then I could live with my conscience. I am looking at the situation this way. On one hand you have a home owner who may have very little or no electrical experience. If I connect it the way that it is described above and IF there is some failure in the wiring and it energizes the non-cc parts and/or the frame of the generator and the HO goes to service the generator and is killed then I would be clearly at fault. On the other hand IF a HO makes up a suicide cord and plugs it in and back feeds on the utility the POCO workers are supposed to be trained and equipped to handle these types of situations. I am not saying it has never happened or that it will never happen again but with the abundance of HO's with generators now verse the past I am sure the POCO's have addressed the situation and how to deal with it.