- Location
- Logan, Utah
And IMO this is just another case of dumbing down the code for the unqualified.
Roger
I agree.
Chris
And IMO this is just another case of dumbing down the code for the unqualified.
Roger
Perhaps...... And IMO this is just another case of dumbing down the code for the unqualified.
Please stop clouding the issues with facts.Numerous electrical equipment will have power connection terminals marked L and N.
Prove itPerhaps...
...but I believe a conductor connected to a source's neutral terminal was called a neutral long before the Code decided to call it a grounded conductor.
Then it should called "a conductor connected to the neutral point".Besides, the name refers to the conductor's source terminal point rather than its function in the circuit.
Slang is not usually accurate wordsAs such, in a two-wire circuit, it is referred to as the neutral.
I will give you the simple part but, simple often accompanies dumb.iIt's just that simple and there is nothing dumb about it.
No, that just means neutral in color, as in white or natural gray, this goes back a long ways too.:roll:Numerous electrical equipment will have power connection terminals marked L and N. So are you saying this is wrong [or dumb] too...???
Roger,Prove it
Then it should called "a conductor connected to the neutral point".
Slang is not usually accurate words
I will give you the simple part but, simple often accompanies dumb.
No, that just means neutral in color, as in white or natural gray, this goes back a long ways too.:roll:
Some are also marked XYZ but, in your example it probably means it must be used with a MWBC.
So in summary, if it helps you to identify the conductor by calling it a neutral, I am very happy that someone saw fit to dumb down the code.
Roger
Roger,
I respect your opinion... but I give it no more weight than that.
Neutral in color is not the same as natural in color. If it were neutral in color, it'd be medium gray or a pastel tint of other colors. A light blue is considered neutral in color. Natural in color refers to compounds without color additives. Take PVC for example. Its natural color—sometimes referred to as its raw color—is off white to various levels of transparency including clear, in general, as there are many different formulations.
Following your remark that simple often accompanies dumb, you might say the wheel was a dumb idea.
I take consolation I am among a multitude of practitioners in this regard... making no difference to me whether you call it dumb, slang, inaccurate, or otherwise.
...and I the same to you, yours and all.And with all that said, Smart$, I wish you and yours a very Merry Christmas.
And Merry Christmas to all.
Roger
No matter what, in the '08. If they share the neutral, simultaneous manual operation is required.Do all three phases have to be simatemisly turn off by the circuit breaker if powering dedicated receptacle?
I need to know
Is there a change in the 2008 NEC, about multi-wired branch circuits shairing the same neuteral conductor?
Do all three phases have to be simatemisly turn off by the circuit breaker if powering dedicated receptacle?