cschmid said:
roger to answer your first question with a question..
What would you call a lighting circuit that shares a neutral if not a MWBC? Than what would you call it if they shared a neutral and were sorted to the same phase?
Cschmid, let's start with the definition;
Branch Circuit, Multiwire. A branch circuit that consists of two or more ungrounded conductors that have a voltage between them, and a grounded conductor that has equal voltage between it and each ungrounded conductor of the circuit and that is connected to the neutral or grounded conductor of the system.
If two circuits from the same leg or phase are present they will not have voltage between them, so it can not be a MWBC
cschmid said:
I thought the code was very specific on MWBC they must disconnect all conductors sharing the same nuetral...Am I mistaken here?
You are mistaken, in present code only a MWBC supplying a device on a common yoke must disconnect all conductors at the same time, see 210.4(B) otherwise single breakers (with out handle ties) are allowed.
cschmid said:
Why would this be different in present code using an MWBC? After it splits it is just two wire circuitry.
I don't understand your question? the circuit never splits.. the neutral and both hots are always present in the j-box's.. MWBC are not a problem on ballast only work.. it becomes a problem on light fixture removal and installs...
If I had multiple rows of fixtures to feed I would drop off the unnecessary circuit conductors at some point closer to the panel, there would be no reason to carry all the conductors to every row.
cschmid said:
Bob you are correct the office managers do not want the lights off.. they move offices around and cram work spaces as they remodel part of the floor and then rearrange the floor and do another part..
And in most cases there would be no reason to turn off circuits that are not being worked on
cschmid said:
Yes roger the amount of cost difference on 100,000 ft of pipe is significant and on them jobs an engineer has set the rules and they are followed completely to the tee... we will get the work either changing it or adding another..So by adding all the extra pipes you also burn up natural resources so either way it costs when you are into large amounts of conduit...
I guess we do things different, I would never expect an engineer to lay out branch circuitry, they may have specific instructions, for instance, they may include a requirement to upsize conductors over x amount of distance, but that is not the same thing. I don't understand what you mean by "adding all the extra pipes" , what extra pipes would this be.
cschmid said:
So is MWBC really a savings when one maintenance person is electrocuted because he did not understand them while he was doing his job.....I don't agree with them doing electrical work while unqualified yet I can not stop them either..
All I can say is, this is where the definition of "Qualified Individual" should be inforced
Qualified Person. One who has skills and knowledge related to the construction and operation of the electrical equipment and installations and has received safety training on the hazards involved.
I certainly do not want anyone to get hurt or killed, but a MWBC would be a very small part of what a "Qualified Person" would need to know.
His / Her Meters and Testers are what needs to be understood more than anything else.
It takes a higher intervention than we can install for to save the "Unqualified Person".
Roger