zam
Member
- Location
- New York, NY
So what is proper procedure to do anything involving that switchboard?Same set up still in use in this building here
So if you wanted to close one of the top switches you would have to be very careful (obviously) not to brush against the lower ones.They are knife switches otherwise known a death traps.
So what is proper procedure to do anything involving that switchboard?
Turn off the main supply, suit up to check for voltage, possibly on every exposed conductive surface to ensure it is off, then proceed with the task you intended to do?
What allows that to remain in place? If not OSHA, then you would at least think no insurance company will be interested in insuring something like that and would push owner to want to replace with something considered safer.
The more interesting part of these switchboards is the back. Typically a wide open array of various sizes of copper bus.
When I started in the trade 15 years ago, I heard the term "dead front" many times but I didn't really understand the term until my apprenticeship school instructor passed around his electrical school book from 30 years prior. There was a section describing "live fronts" like the one pictured above. All of a sudden it all made sense.

We called those rear spaces “suicide rooms”.
