Pat Weldon
Member
Can a circuit breaker that supplies power to a Fire Alarm and Fire suppresion system be locked on? Molded case breaker will trip due to overcurrent. :-?
695.4(B)(2)(2) is a good place to start. Additionally, circuit breakers are to be trip free (240.80 and means that it can be locked in the closed position and still open in the case of overcurrent. Lastly, if there is no place that says you can't lock it, then you can lock it. This is a permissive Code. :smile:Pat Weldon said:. . . what article in the NEC I can find that?
Funny, I just installed a handle-lock on a breaker this morning for a fire-panel supply circuit I installed yesterday.iwire said:Yes you can lock breaker handles on, the NEC even requires that for circuits supplying only EBUs.
As 480 mentioned it does not keep it from tripping.
LarryFine said:How far back have breakers had the free-trip requirement? What if the breaker that must be locked on is not of the free-trip design?