Re: Main Panel in Crawlling Space?
Originally posted by mtn_elec: But what I do not understand is why Charlie said "However, I would like to think that any future work, even so simple as adding a circuit with a new breaker, would be done with power shut off at the main"
What I was talking about was the next job at that location, the one two years from now, when the homeowner adds a garage or something, and needs a new breaker put into the panel in the crawl space.
I was merely suggesting a safety measure: Turn off the main breaker at the panel (having first arranged for temporary lighting in the crawl space), before you open the panel to place the conductors and to add the breaker. I am guessing that that would not be your normal way of doing this type of job. But since there is not much headroom, and since you will likely be on your knees (or stopping over) to do the job, it will be more of a hazard than you normally see. You would not have your usual sense of balance; your hands and feet would not enjoy their normal degree of natural, cooperative stability. I perceive that this would increase, however slightly, the probability of accidentally making contact with a live bus.
What would be worse, if you did contact a live bus, and when you lost control of your muscles, the falling weight of your body might not be able to pull your hands away from the box.
110.26 is all about protecting the worker. If you perform the work on a de-energized panel, the hazard is all but eliminated. If you perform the work live, and if the physical circumstances of the installation are out of the ordinary, then you take a risk that is also out of the ordinary. It would violate my notion of ?nothing is more important than safety,? and you could avoid it by turning off the power before doing the job.