colosparker said:Keeping in mind that where I live we have 4 different AHJ's (City, County State and Federal) when it comes to electrical work... Some of them use the 2005 NEC. Some use 2002. Heck some of them are still on the 96 NEC. And some of them just make up their own rules.
roger said:Larry, and your point is? :lol: :lol: :lol:
Roger
sandsnow said:I see electricians all the time who don't understand the NEC, let alone have ever seen one. I'll just throw the book away and we'll be equal.
roger said:Larry, it was, notice my laughy's (is that a word?) :wink:
Roger
Gmack said:Well Larry. Thank you for making my point.
Your worried about straps and inches.
Try hazards.
I suppose now I will get warned or kicked off.
your history has shown you are way to savvy and above something like your April fools post would have us believe, so it didn't take to much on my part to know better.I wasn't sure.
iwire said:sandsnow said:I see electricians all the time who don't understand the NEC, let alone have ever seen one. I'll just throw the book away and we'll be equal.
LMAO :lol:
Enjoy your more relaxing and less stressful job. :lol:
Gmack said:See Larry, there you go again.
OOPS! Did I type that out loud??
Way off NEC. That which your presumed to uphold.
I got a wild smart aleck sense of humor. I do a pretty good job of enforcing just the Code. I've been shown to be wrong many times and always back down gracefully. I've learned a thing or two from some contractors. also here at the Forum. Sometimes I will make a call and go back and read the Code and find out I screwed up. I'm back on the job the next day to apologize for my mistake.
It seems your at odds with your job AND electricians doing theirs.
While my April Fool's post was in jest, it does express some frustrations I have sometimes.
Make no mistake. I enjoy talking to electricians regarding Code requirements. I will always insist we have a book so both of us can see the Code section. I enjoy my job the most when I work with a contractor They know I will listen to their argument if it is Code based or if the Code leaves room for an interpretation.
I will admit there are some who try my patience.
After many years seeing electricians with a lack of Code knowledge, I decided to give back. I taught Level 1 apprentice classes for many years and currently teach Code review for the CA certification test. I also have a 2002 changes class and a 3 night grounding seminar coming up.
No respect from me.
flick said:Gotta tell you about this one. Local inspector came to inspect a 200A service upgrade I had just completed. Everything was fine. As he's closing up the panel, he says:
"Just so you know, I like to see a GFCI breaker in the panel when there's a service upgrade."
In other words, "start putting in a GFCI breaker every time you do a service upgrade".
<snip>
John