LarryFine
Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
- Location
- Henrico County, VA
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
I'm not sure that Art. 210.52(C)(5)Exc.(b) specifically prohibits the receptacle from facing 90 degrees from an under-6"-overhang edge. As we like to say, the code says what it says, not . . . , well, you know the rest.
What if we used a surface-mount box (like a floor-duct "doghouse" box) that lets one or two receptacles face 90 degrees to the within-6" edge. Would the location now cease to comply? Does "within" = "face toward"?
One may none-the-less argue that it's implied, just as those people from the linked-to thread (that I started, by some strange coincident) say that all island receptacles are, and must be, counter-top-serving receptacles.
It also implies, bit doesn't outright state, that a countertop with a stepped surface (i.e., "backsplashes,
dividers, etc."), cannot have the required receptacle(s) below the surface. But, which surface now?
Doesn't the upper surface of a two-level countertop with a back-splash still end up with a receptacle below it? Does the within-24"-of-any-point rul now apply, or does one receptacle for the entire (undivided) space still apply?
If the countertop has such a backsplash or divider, does that mean that every receptacle on the island must be on this vertical surface? What if the vertical surface isn't tall enough for even a horizontally-mounted receptacle?
Hmmmm.
What if we used a surface-mount box (like a floor-duct "doghouse" box) that lets one or two receptacles face 90 degrees to the within-6" edge. Would the location now cease to comply? Does "within" = "face toward"?
One may none-the-less argue that it's implied, just as those people from the linked-to thread (that I started, by some strange coincident) say that all island receptacles are, and must be, counter-top-serving receptacles.
It also implies, bit doesn't outright state, that a countertop with a stepped surface (i.e., "backsplashes,
dividers, etc."), cannot have the required receptacle(s) below the surface. But, which surface now?
Doesn't the upper surface of a two-level countertop with a back-splash still end up with a receptacle below it? Does the within-24"-of-any-point rul now apply, or does one receptacle for the entire (undivided) space still apply?
If the countertop has such a backsplash or divider, does that mean that every receptacle on the island must be on this vertical surface? What if the vertical surface isn't tall enough for even a horizontally-mounted receptacle?
Hmmmm.