iaov
Senior Member
- Location
- Rhinelander WI
Its the same here in the northwoods.I can't take many pictures of construction in South Florida that don't show some kind of OSHA violation.![]()
Its the same here in the northwoods.I can't take many pictures of construction in South Florida that don't show some kind of OSHA violation.![]()
Or 98%+ of all residential construction sights.
I'd call you Local AHJ dude and ask them.
My inspector will be on site tomorrow for an underground inspection. I'll walk him through.
There is a chance I can install 20 floor boxes without the office noticing, but if they do, the owner of our company will not read 210.52, he will just say they are not required because no one will ever want to plug anything in there. Butting heads with this gentleman on code issues has grown tiresome.
as every one says you may need the recps. but it is not your company shouldn't the owner be allowed to decide either way because it his money on the line. if i were the EC and you brought it to the inspector before me i would be upset as to me you are creating issues. If I were in that situation i would bury whips in the sub floor where if the inspector called me on it I could cut them in later. and if he didn't I didn't waste the bosses money
as every one says you may need the recps. but it is not your company shouldn't the owner be allowed to decide either way because it his money on the line. if i were the EC and you brought it to the inspector before me i would be upset as to me you are creating issues. If I were in that situation i would bury whips in the sub floor where if the inspector called me on it I could cut them in later. and if he didn't I didn't waste the bosses money
but it is not your company shouldn't the owner be allowed to decide either way because it his money on the line. if i were the EC and you brought it to the inspector before me i would be upset as to me you are creating issues.
Is this safe and code compliant?If I were in that situation i would bury whips in the sub floor where if the inspector called me on it I could cut them in later.
as the people have posted in some areas they would be put in and others they would not so I merely offered a practical solution that would satisify either out come. my main point is that it is the owners call not the employee,
if the whips are not connected at either end the it is legal.
I agree that it is a good thing that he caught it and it should be brought th the contractors attention but i still say at the end of the day it is the contractor who should make the call on it , where there are differing opinions on if they are required or not.
if the whips are not connected at either end the it is legal.
I agree that it is a good thing that he caught it and it should be brought th the contractors attention but i still say at the end of the day it is the contractor who should make the call on it , where there are differing opinions on if they are required or not.
You know I will do my best to get an extra for this. The problem is, when these plan were bid, there is an annoying little note at the top of the EE's general notes that states:
'Installation shall comply with the currently recognized edition of the NEC'.