malachi constant
Senior Member
- Location
- Minneapolis
Imagine if you will a corridor controlled by a relay panel. 2/3rds of the lights are controlled via normal relay, the remaining 1/3rd by a UL 924 emergency relay. Imagine that someone decides (perhaps as an energy savings strategy) to program the corridors such that they normally operate at only 2/3rds the light (i.e. the emergency relays get shut off). The system is wired such that loss of power at the building main is sensed at the emergency panel, and any switching of the emergency lights is overridden and they are forced on. BUT if the local 20A/1P lighting circuit is tripped or turned off the em switching would NOT be overridden, so the normal lighting circuit for the area would be deenergized and the entire corridor would be dark.
Sounds like a code violation, right? Show me where. I can't find it.
OK, what if the relays are controlled by a password-protected software such that only authorized persons have the ability to control the corridor lights. Does NEC 700.20 allow this? I think it might. (EDIT: Under this 'authorized persons only' scenario, there would be protocol in place such that the lights would not be shut off during occupied hours, but they would be allowed to be shut off after-hours. The end result would still be a local breaker trip would keep all lights off (and they already WERE all off, so no big deal right...?) But a building main trip would still turn emergency lights on.)
This is purely theoretical of course.
Oh, and if you don't like this design, please don't attack me as I am on your side. Just trying to find if there are any flat-out non-negotiable violations with it.
Sounds like a code violation, right? Show me where. I can't find it.
OK, what if the relays are controlled by a password-protected software such that only authorized persons have the ability to control the corridor lights. Does NEC 700.20 allow this? I think it might. (EDIT: Under this 'authorized persons only' scenario, there would be protocol in place such that the lights would not be shut off during occupied hours, but they would be allowed to be shut off after-hours. The end result would still be a local breaker trip would keep all lights off (and they already WERE all off, so no big deal right...?) But a building main trip would still turn emergency lights on.)
This is purely theoretical of course.
Oh, and if you don't like this design, please don't attack me as I am on your side. Just trying to find if there are any flat-out non-negotiable violations with it.
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