johnny watt
Member
In residential basements:
When I see oil furnaces, most of the time they have a power switch at the top of the basement stairs.
When I see natural gas or LP furnaces, most of the of the time I see power switches attached to the furnace unit, with EMT run to the height of the ceiling joist and then NM back to the panel.
I hate furnace switches at the top of the stairs. What does the code require?
When I see oil furnaces, most of the time they have a power switch at the top of the basement stairs.
When I see natural gas or LP furnaces, most of the of the time I see power switches attached to the furnace unit, with EMT run to the height of the ceiling joist and then NM back to the panel.
I hate furnace switches at the top of the stairs. What does the code require?