Dan Kissel
Member
- Location
- st louis, mo
Pretty much what we did as standard on all our panels.We have many panels with thru the door disconnects. The LOTO goes on the mechanism attached to the panel door but once you open the door you have essentially removed your LOTO from the OCPD. This is the way the panels are designed and meant to be used.
Hos is LOTO applied in this situation?
View attachment 17761
Looks like an ABB product. That's mostly what we used. There was also an attachment used, I don't know what it was called, but it hooked through the operating handle mechanism and allowed multiple padlocks to be attached.For machine control panels, NFPA 79 addresses this, requiring another interior LO/TO mechanism on the switching device. Most mfrs offer them as an option, usually referred to as an "NFPA79 handle".
Yes, that one in the photo is ABB, but just about everyone selling rotary thru-door disconnects in the US has some form or another available, they have to if they are serious about our market (some low-ball Chinese suppliers don't bother).Looks like an ABB product. That's mostly what we used. There was also an attachment used, I don't know what it was called, but it hooked through the operating handle mechanism and allowed multiple padlocks to be attached.
We have many panels with thru the door disconnects. The LOTO goes on the mechanism attached to the panel door but once you open the door you have essentially removed your LOTO from the OCPD. This is the way the panels are designed and meant to be used.
Hos is LOTO applied in this situation?
View attachment 17761