1) NEC section 330.40
2) Revised text indicated in square brackets
3) Proposal:
330.40 Boxes and Fittings. Fittings used for connecting [ smooth sheath and corrugated sheath ] Type MC cable to boxes, cabinets, or other equipment shall be listed and identified for such use. [ Fittings used with interlocking armor Type MC cable with a waterproofing sheath shall be listed and identified for such use. ] [ Interlocking armor Type MC cable without a nonmetallic waterproof covering shall be connected in accordance with 320.40 using antishort bushings and fittings listed for use with Type AC cable. Fittings that are listed for use with both Types MC and AC cable shall be permitted. ]
4) Substantiation: The difference in rules for interlocking armor Type MC and Type AC cable is a source of utter confusion and short circuits. Most electricians I know are incapable of knowing this difference. Most electrical inspectors cannot readily tell the difference between indoor interlocking armor Type MC cable and Type AC cable. Terminating both types of interlocking armor cables in the SAME manner will improve electrical safety by SIMPLFYING the rules.
There is also a Type MC interlocking armor cable on the market that uses a bare copper equipment grounding conductor that is in contact with the sheath. This product adds to the confusion.
An example is that in the summer of 2004 some buddies of mine were wiring a health care facility using type AC cable. When I got there my boss and his apprentices had installed a substatial amount of Type AC cable using type MC box connectors WITHOUT using any antishort bushings. This was because my boss thought that he was installing Type MC cable. I was the only person on the job who had spotted this error and I told my boss that next time he must use antishort bushings. Any terminations that I had to redo were redone with antishort bushings but I was not about to redo the whole installation since it was not my insurance policy that was on the line.
The electrical inspector did not catch this error either. Once Type AC cable and indoor Type MC cable is installed there is not a way for the inspector to tell the difference. There is no external marking. In the case of waterproof interlocking armor type MC cable the difference is obvious because of the nonmetallic sheath.
Some places have banned type AC cable because they have had problems in the past with making electricians install the antishort bushings. These places could also ban interlocking armor Type MC cable because of fear that Type AC cable could be sneaked in by claiming that it is Type MC.
To my knowledge, smooth sheath and corrugated sheath Type MC cable that is rated 600 volts or less is no longer made in the United States.
This difference in rules is a lot like how Abraham Lincoln once publically asked, "If you call a dog's tail a leg, how many legs does it have?" Similarly, interlocking armor indoor Type MC cable is like calling a dog's leg a tail and saying that is has 2 tails and 3 legs.
[ July 02, 2005, 02:06 PM: Message edited by: mc5w ]
2) Revised text indicated in square brackets
3) Proposal:
330.40 Boxes and Fittings. Fittings used for connecting [ smooth sheath and corrugated sheath ] Type MC cable to boxes, cabinets, or other equipment shall be listed and identified for such use. [ Fittings used with interlocking armor Type MC cable with a waterproofing sheath shall be listed and identified for such use. ] [ Interlocking armor Type MC cable without a nonmetallic waterproof covering shall be connected in accordance with 320.40 using antishort bushings and fittings listed for use with Type AC cable. Fittings that are listed for use with both Types MC and AC cable shall be permitted. ]
4) Substantiation: The difference in rules for interlocking armor Type MC and Type AC cable is a source of utter confusion and short circuits. Most electricians I know are incapable of knowing this difference. Most electrical inspectors cannot readily tell the difference between indoor interlocking armor Type MC cable and Type AC cable. Terminating both types of interlocking armor cables in the SAME manner will improve electrical safety by SIMPLFYING the rules.
There is also a Type MC interlocking armor cable on the market that uses a bare copper equipment grounding conductor that is in contact with the sheath. This product adds to the confusion.
An example is that in the summer of 2004 some buddies of mine were wiring a health care facility using type AC cable. When I got there my boss and his apprentices had installed a substatial amount of Type AC cable using type MC box connectors WITHOUT using any antishort bushings. This was because my boss thought that he was installing Type MC cable. I was the only person on the job who had spotted this error and I told my boss that next time he must use antishort bushings. Any terminations that I had to redo were redone with antishort bushings but I was not about to redo the whole installation since it was not my insurance policy that was on the line.
The electrical inspector did not catch this error either. Once Type AC cable and indoor Type MC cable is installed there is not a way for the inspector to tell the difference. There is no external marking. In the case of waterproof interlocking armor type MC cable the difference is obvious because of the nonmetallic sheath.
Some places have banned type AC cable because they have had problems in the past with making electricians install the antishort bushings. These places could also ban interlocking armor Type MC cable because of fear that Type AC cable could be sneaked in by claiming that it is Type MC.
To my knowledge, smooth sheath and corrugated sheath Type MC cable that is rated 600 volts or less is no longer made in the United States.
This difference in rules is a lot like how Abraham Lincoln once publically asked, "If you call a dog's tail a leg, how many legs does it have?" Similarly, interlocking armor indoor Type MC cable is like calling a dog's leg a tail and saying that is has 2 tails and 3 legs.
[ July 02, 2005, 02:06 PM: Message edited by: mc5w ]