Matt E
Member
- Location
- North Carolina
- Occupation
- Electrician
Good afternoon, and Happy New Year.
I am located in North Carolina, which is currently enforcing the 2017 edition of the NEC. While inspecting a newly constructed one-family dwelling (less than one year old), I observed an electric fireplace supplied by a branch circuit protected by a 15-ampere overcurrent protective device and wired with 14 AWG NM cable. The branch-circuit conductors at the appliance terminal block exhibited visible insulation damage consistent with overheating.
Appliance nameplate information:
I am particularly interested in any applicable guidance from Article 422, 110.3(B) regarding manufacturer’s instructions, and whether conductor damage at the terminal block would more appropriately indicate a termination issue under 110.14(D) rather than a load-sizing issue.
Thank you in advance for any code-based insight or references.
I am located in North Carolina, which is currently enforcing the 2017 edition of the NEC. While inspecting a newly constructed one-family dwelling (less than one year old), I observed an electric fireplace supplied by a branch circuit protected by a 15-ampere overcurrent protective device and wired with 14 AWG NM cable. The branch-circuit conductors at the appliance terminal block exhibited visible insulation damage consistent with overheating.
Appliance nameplate information:
- Model: SF-SC55-BK
- Voltage: 120 V AC
- Frequency: 60 Hz
- Rated current: 12.5 A
- Rated power: 1500 W
I am particularly interested in any applicable guidance from Article 422, 110.3(B) regarding manufacturer’s instructions, and whether conductor damage at the terminal block would more appropriately indicate a termination issue under 110.14(D) rather than a load-sizing issue.
Thank you in advance for any code-based insight or references.