- Location
- Lockport, IL
- Occupation
- Semi-Retired Electrical Engineer
iwire said:To me that would be like saying the word 'garage' means automobiles.
You mean that there are garages with automobiles in them?
iwire said:To me that would be like saying the word 'garage' means automobiles.
charlie b said:You mean that there are garages with automobiles in them?![]()
dnem said:"CMP doesn't view"
Where does that conclusion come from ?
David
charlie b said:Is it clear to other persons than myself that, when this exception mentions, "not to be installed or permitted," the AHJ is not the authority that decides what is, and what is not, "to be permitted"? That exception is talking about the owner. The NEC often uses language along the lines of, ". . . it shall be permitted to . . . ." By here, the owner is the authority. The owner decided what is "to be permitted."
georgestolz said:Here are all the panel statements regarding all the proposals to the 2008, 210.11(C)(2). I have omitted "insufficient substantiation" comments.
- 2-95 The current text provides for minimum installation requirements. An additional circuit may be provided for compact or stacked laundry equipment.
- 2-94 The laundry branch circuit is intended to supply one or more receptacle outlets for electrical appliances that are typically used for the purpose of laundering clothes.
- 2-97 The intent of this section is to require at least one 20-ampere branch-circuit that is dedicated to the laundry area to ensure that the branch circuit is sufficiently sized to supply electrical equipment associated with doing laundry, such as an iron. Receptacles installed in a laundry area intended to serve laundry equipment must comply with 210.11(C)(2) as presently written. The requirements in section 210.11 do not preclude the addition of other branch circuits in the laundry area.
- 2-98 The addition of term ?equipment? as proposed by the submitter adds no further clarity to the present text. The proposed new exception is not necessary. The rule as written does not limit the number of receptacle outlets supplied by the laundry branch circuit. However, that circuit shall not supply outlets that are not covered in 210.52(F).
M.D. posted the most compelling one, 2-97. They flat out state they consider ironing to be a part of laundering.
2-98 was mine. They don't consider the requirement to be governing equipment, but rather, an undefined area, IMO.
georgestolz said:2-95 The current text provides for minimum installation requirements. An additional circuit may be provided for compact or stacked laundry equipment.
georgestolz said:2-94 The laundry branch circuit is intended to supply one or more receptacle outlets for electrical appliances that are typically used for the purpose of laundering clothes.
georgestolz said:2-97 The intent of this section is to require at least one 20-ampere branch-circuit that is dedicated to the laundry area to ensure that the branch circuit is sufficiently sized to supply electrical equipment associated with doing laundry, such as an iron. Receptacles installed in a laundry area intended to serve laundry equipment must comply with 210.11(C)(2) as presently written. The requirements in section 210.11 do not preclude the addition of other branch circuits in the laundry area.
georgestolz said:2-98 The addition of term ?equipment? as proposed by the submitter adds no further clarity to the present text. The proposed new exception is not necessary. The rule as written does not limit the number of receptacle outlets supplied by the laundry branch circuit. However, that circuit shall not supply outlets that are not covered in 210.52(F).
It was a similar thread that spurred the proposal. Click here. IMO, this section's not entirely clear.dnem said:"The addition of term ?equipment? as proposed by the submitter adds no further clarity to the present text."
The code panel evidently thinks it has been clear enough and there's no reason for further clarity and yet here we are debating on this thread.
So, take that logic and spin it around. We know that an iron is considered a laundering appliance, by the CMP's statement and the dictionary definitions. So, would a 15A dedicated circuit for an iron in a dedicated space be illegal, if the 20A "washer" circuit were already installed?I now realize that there are people here that will never admit to restrictions on the clotheswasher circuit unless the specific word "clotheswasher" is used in the NEC.
I see this as a clearly unreasonable position to take.
I will concede that a washer is laundry equipment. I'd ask you to concede that the NEC does not mention "laundry equipment"; it mentions "laundry."dnem said:Is there anything here that would lead anybody to believe that the clotheswasher isn't laundry equipment ? . . . Is the clotheswasher "typically used for the purpose of laundering clothes" ? That is what "the laundry branch circuit is intended to supply" !
Pants press? Hand-held steamer (blows steam at a sweater hung on a rack, to take out the wrinkles)? Heated towel drying rack (I have one of these)?dnem said:It specifically lists the example of "such as an iron" but is there other "electrical equipment associated with doing laundry" in the laundry room ? What would that equipment be ?
I will admit that I no longer know what position you are trying to take. I will state my position as follows:dnem said:I now realize that there are people here that will never admit to restrictions on the clotheswasher circuit unless the specific word "clotheswasher" is used in the NEC. I see this as a clearly unreasonable position to take.
charlie b said:
Yes. The intent is to provide a circuit that can serve the needs of the homeowner. If that HO buys a different model of washer and dryer, or if the house is sold to someone else, the house must have a circuit available to serve the laundry.
No. The rules for the laundry circuit do not disappear, if you install a special circuit for a special type of laundry equipment.
georgestolz said:So, take that logic and spin it around. We know that an iron is considered a laundering appliance, by the CMP's statement and the dictionary definitions. So, would a 15A dedicated circuit for an iron in a dedicated space be illegal, if the 20A "washer" circuit were already installed?
charlie b said:dnem said:Is there anything here that would lead anybody to believe that the clotheswasher isn't laundry equipment ? . . . Is the clotheswasher "typically used for the purpose of laundering clothes" ? That is what "the laundry branch circuit is intended to supply" !
I will concede that a washer is laundry equipment. I'd ask you to concede that the NEC does not mention "laundry equipment"; it mentions "laundry."
charlie b said:dnem said:It specifically lists the example of "such as an iron" but is there other "electrical equipment associated with doing laundry" in the laundry room ? What would that equipment be ?
Pants press? Hand-held steamer (blows steam at a sweater hung on a rack, to take out the wrinkles)? Heated towel drying rack (I have one of these)?
charlie b said:I will admit that I no longer know what position you are trying to take. I will state my position as follows:
(1) Install a 20 amp circuit to which you connect one or more receptacles in the laundry area, and to which you connect no lights and no receptacles outside the laundry area.
(2) Install as many other 15 or 20 amp circuits as you like, with some powering receptacles in the laundry area and also powering lights and receptacles in other rooms.
(3) Then leave the home to the HO.
(4) If the HO chooses to plug a TV into "the 20 amp circuit that was put there for the laundry," and chooses to plug the washer into a 15 amp circuit that also serves basement lights, that is not a code violation.
hillbilly said:I meant to add to my question. If the homeowner decides to buy a combo wash/dry unit and and plug in a freezer in the space that was intended for the washing machine, thereby hiding the 20A laundry circuit, would you add another laundry circuit? I realize that I've met the intent of the code with the first 20A laundry receptacle, but the homeowner still doesn't have a place to plug in his/her iron (unless it's a general use receptacle).
Which is safer, a iron plugged into a general use receptacle or a extension cord run under the freezer for the iron? I've thought of adding another receptacle to the laundry circuit, but if the freezer is more than 10A (haven't seen it yet), i'm still SOL.
I realize that the homeowner created the problem, but he just gave me a (glowing) referral on another new home (that's close to home), and I want him to be happy.
I'll probably install (and eat) another dedicated circuit to the laundry room.
Service Sells.
steve
hillbilly said:Which is safer, a iron plugged into a general use receptacle or a extension cord run under the freezer for the iron?
dnem said:I now realize that there are people here that will never admit to restrictions on the clotheswasher circuit unless the specific word "clotheswasher" is used in the NEC.
I see this as a clearly unreasonable position to take
Let's go a step further. The iron in the dedicated space is hardwired.dnem said:A permanently installed ironing board/plug combo that folds down out of the wall would need to be on the 12gauge 20a, no hardwired lights, no other room/area outlets circuit. It could be on the same circuit as the clotheswasher or a separate one. The iron itself need not be present. The permanently mounted ironing board is ?dedicated space? for the ?laundry? equipment called an iron.
Suppose a free-standing ironing board were on the plans, next to a narrow closet that you suspect is supposed to house the ironing board when not in use. Suppose the closest receptacle was 4' away, and on a dedicated 15A branch circuit.dnem said:But, you didn't say general purpose, you specifically stated that the circuit was for an iron which is laundry equipment that must be on a laundry circuit.
georgestolz said:I agree with you that they intend to get the washer on that required circuit.
iwire said:If we install to code minimum that 20 amp circuit will supply the washer and perhaps the dryer along with as many other receptacles in that room for ironing, portable heater etc.
If we go beyond code and bring in more circuits be they 15 or 20 amp why would the NEC care which supplies which?
Once we bring in additional circuits we have more available power in the room than code minimum.
I bet there are Irons that take more power to operate than either a washer or gas dryer.
e57 said:WOW!!!!!