Field-assembled transfer switch o.k.?

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LarryFine

Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
Location
Henrico County, VA
Occupation
Electrical Contractor
In a restaurant back room, is it compliant to use one of these:

New-Square-D-Generator-Transfer-switch-Panel-Indoor.jpg


. . . to make on of these:

s-l300.jpg


. . . to be installed near the existing panel?

Owner wants to be able to use a portable genny (30a) to run the walk-in cooler (240v, 12-ish amps), a freezer (120v), and one other 120v load (tbd). The plan is to replace the 20a 2p walk-in breaker with a 40a 2p breaker to feed the above TS, with a 30a 2p breaker from the inlet.

I presume back-fed-breaker hold-down requirements apply. Can the TS be mounted above the panel, or does the 6.5' rule apply? Is it also compliant to use a flanged inlet and pop-rivet it to a wall plate to avoid having to hang a surface-mount inlet box to the wall (indoors, not out).

Anything else to consider? Danke!
 

Pretty neat. If it is a factory part, what is the problem? I do not have an answer to your other questions, however I do not see a problem with using a field made transfer switch in this application. What are your concerns?

Without delving into the exceptions on switch height, I would be inclined to think the six and a half foot rule applies, since it is not a stand-alone switch, rather a breaker panel.
 
What are your concerns?
Having to come up with a more expensive alternative to appease the inspector, mainly.

Without delving into the exceptions on switch height, I would be inclined to think the six and a half foot rule applies, since it is not a stand-alone switch, rather a breaker panel.
Agreed, since the additional breakers in the new panel would become the branch-circuit breakers.
 
A step is out of the question, but below the panel is a small possibility. It's typical drywall-on-steel-studs construction, so I will also look into an adjacent stud space.
 
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