I'm not so sure I agree.charlie b said:. . . there is no need to be concerned about the lost connection to planet Earth.
Not the entire control circuit, but only up to the first relay contact. I'm not going to say this clearly, since I haven't had any coffee yet this morning. With the neutral open, all relays within the circuit deenergize, and all points that require the "on/off" contacts to be "on" will lose power.LarryFine said:. . . it also means that, if this fuse were to open, the entire control circuit would be hot relative to the enclosures.
I have seen control circuits that have fuses on both legs of the control circuit. I don't generally work with this type of equipment, so I can't tell you why some control circuits fuse both legs and others fuse only the ungrounded leg.hardworkingstiff said:I fail to understand why a fuse would be installed on this conductor. I think there should be one on the ungrounded conductor.
But isn't this stuff inside (or otherwise a portion of) a listed component, and therefore not under the jurisdiction of the NEC?steve66 said:I think this sounds like a violation of 240.22.