georgestolz said:Why would someone "fill" the ground hole?
lorddrago said:I've heard something mentioned from a home inspector allowing you to fill in the grounding socket of a 3 prong receptacle in order to make it a 2 prong ungrounded receptacle. Has anyone heard anything about this or have any facts on the issue.
georgestolz said:3. See Article 406.3(A). All new receptacles are to be of the grounding type.
celtic said:Now if we want to break out the reference materials: - 406.3(D) Replacements. Now you "know.
lorddrago said:I've heard something mentioned from a home inspector allowing you to fill in the grounding socket of a 3 prong receptacle in order to make it a 2 prong ungrounded receptacle. Has anyone heard anything about this or have any facts on the issue.
We have no real facts here. We don't know when the 3-prong receptacles were installed, and thus we don't know the code version that was in effect at the time. Installing them might not have been a violation. It is possible that they were installed shortly after they became available, but before the NEC picked it up as a requirement.Dnkldorf said:Charlie, if the original installer of these 3 prong receptacles, violated 406.3(d)(3)(a) by installing them, how can leaving a code violation or modifying a know code violation, be any safer than just making it code compliant?