oldsparky52
Senior Member
- Location
- Wilmington, NC USA
I came across this today. I did a quick search and didn't see it here, if it has already been shared, sorry.
Were they required when the house was originally built?Doing my own addition, I was failed because the rest of my house didn't have dual powered smoke detectors (I did in the addition though). I guess I got nailed because I was the owner, not the permit holder... should have paid someone else to do ti.
Doing my own addition, I was failed because the rest of my house didn't have dual powered smoke detectors (I did in the addition though).
Smoke detectors are not required by NEC. NEC would cover any premises wiring that connects to them though.Were they required when the house was originally built?
It just seems like some inspectors inspect as though the NEC is retroactive.
I know. I was making a point.Smoke detectors are not required by NEC. NEC would cover any premises wiring that connects to them though.
Thanks for that.
That is going in my files for reference.
I have been failed before because the inspector wanted two rods at the base.
I was adding a couple of circuits for an addition only. That has always stuck in my craw...
Adding ground rods is not bonding it is grounding. Chances are pretty high the system is grounded at the source.The “affects work” part is trouble with grounding since your bonding connects to it. It sounds like over reach but it’s a little harder to justify grounding violations vs other circuits unrelated to yours.