- Location
- Illinois
- Occupation
- retired electrician
Fused disconnects are listed to UL 98 and switchgear is listed to UL 1558. They are to totally different products and nothing in 408 applies to a stand alone fused disconnect switch.
I am not saying the the standards modify the NEC, but they clearly tell you that a fused disconnect is not switchgear. We are not going to agree on this. There is no way that any rule in Article 408 applies to a stand alone fused disconnect.I totally agree 100% however UL standards cannot modify the NEC.
In the UL whitebook its WIAX "Enclosed dead front switches".
I agree they are totally different animals.
A recessed light, a pin and sleeve receptacle, and a duplex receptacle are manufactured under different UL standards
NEC defines them all as 'outlets'.
However when CMP9 changed the definition in 2014 they intended to create a 'generic' catch all term.
Perhaps it was a mistake, too broad I am not on CMP9 I dont know?
I do know it would take about 5 minutes to convince a jury that the NEC definition of switchgear covers anything under UL 98 WIAX "Enclosed dead front switches".
Technically, the J-box or the wall box would be the outlet. The light is utilization equipment, and the receptacles are devices.A recessed light, a pin and sleeve receptacle, and a duplex receptacle are manufactured under different UL standards
NEC defines them all as 'outlets'.
On a jobsite we would agree on what switchgear is and what a 'fused disconnect' is.There is no way that any rule in Article 408 applies to a stand alone fused disconnect.
That "and" is what would differentiate a stand alone fused switch from one used within switchgear. There are no buses in a stand-alone fused switch assembly. If it said "or", then you would have a point, but that's not what it says. Buses AND connections. No bus, not switchgear.I ask you all to consider how is a fused disconnect not
" An assembly completely enclosed on all sides and
top with sheet metal and containing primary power circuit switching,
interrupting devices, or both, with buses and connections."?
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