But it would indeed help with safety...
But it would indeed help with safety...
peter d said:
I don't see where opinion matters much on this issue. It's not required by any codes and it does not provide any measure of safety.
Sorry peter, I have to disagree with the "does not provide any measure of safety" point.
I grew up in Ohio and quite a few homes there had oil burners. The switch, especially at the top of the stairs, was there in the (admittedly unlikely) event that the burner failed to ignite and didn't shut down, thereby letting the burner pump to continue pumping oil into the firebox. My understanding is that the pump was the kind with two meshing gears, and if stopped the oil flow couldn't feed through by gravity.
I do recall one neighbor who experienced a failure and ended up with a fair-sized puddle of fuel oil on the floor. He was grateful to have that cutoff so he didn't have to try to wade through to get to the fusebox. (Yeah, it was a while back. )
And in the (again) rare event of some other failure of the furnace, either gas or oil, it would be prudent to have a quick shutoff accessable by the homeowner, who will probably be too panicked in an emergency to seek out the correct fuse/breaker.
I do recall reading in the '99 Code book that the emergency switch, when installed, was required to have the Red plate, (to make it distinct from the light switch?) but I don't think the switch itself was a requirement.
I'll try to look it up again.