Please note that the "readily accessible" requirement is new to the 2011 version.
Do you know that section number?
look in post 2:roll:
Those GFCIs may not be required to be readily accessible even in the 2011 code. The rule only applies to GFCI devices that are required by 210.8. That would open the debate as to the pantry area being a kitchen or not.Oh Ok thats why I couldnt find it lol. Thanks I just looked in my 2011 Codebook because the building that I work in has little Pantry areas with convection ovens in Microwaves mounted in a wall cabinet and the receptacles behind them are GFCI outlets. Thank You for your help.
Did you mean "and"? Convection ovens AND microwaves? Just checking. That could make the difference between whether these areas are declared to be "kitchens," in the context of 210.8. In my local area, this would be a kitchen.. . . with convection ovens in Microwaves mounted in a wall cabinet and the receptacles behind them are GFCI outlets.
But wait! There is another issue here that could open up a debate! Is a microwave oven an "obstacle," in the context of the article 100 definition of "accessible, readily"? For my part, I think not. If the microwave (and/or convection oven) is (are) simply placed on a shelf, as opposed to being screwed into place, then I think the receptacle behind it (them) would still be readily accessible.
Those GFCIs may not be required to be readily accessible even in the 2011 code. The rule only applies to GFCI devices that are required by 210.8. That would open the debate as to the pantry area being a kitchen or not.
Under the rules of the game of golf, yes. Under the rules of the NEC, perhaps not. As we now see, however, this installation requires removal of screws, in order to move the appliances, in order to get to the receptacles. So I would call them obstacles, and conclude that these receptacles are not readilly accessible. So perhaps the solution would be to replace the GFCI receptacles with standard receptacles, and install GFCI breaker(s) in the (locked) panelboard that is located in the electrical room (behind a locked door). Then the GFCI device would be readily accessible. :happyyes:If you gotta pick it up, push it aside, or reach over it: it is an obstacle.
This is not a dwelling unit. See post #4. But even if it were a dwelling unit, presuming the local rules do not call this pantry a kitchen, the receptacles would have to be fed from a SABC, but would not require GFCI protection.Doesn't the pantry area have to be on a SABC?
Not all of the receptacles that are on the SABCs have to have GFCI protection.Doesn't the pantry area have to be on a SABC?
I attended a code discussion meeting this morning, a monthly event that includes participation by local utilities, contractors, engineering firms, inspection authorities, and others. This topic came up. One attendee, who happens to be on one of the NEC code making panels, expressed the opinion that a microwave sitting on a kitchen countertop would not be an ?obstacle? (in the context of the definition of ?readily accessible?), but a microwave sitting on a shelf would be, even if it were not screwed into position. Her reasoning was that we are supposed to test the GFCI device every month. If a homeowner had to take the microwave off the shelf, in order to get to the GFCI outlet at the back of the shelf, the homeowner simply would not ever do that test. So she would fail an installation that placed a GFCI outlet in that location (if the install were done under the 2011 NEC, which has not been adopted in Washington State yet).