lvsparky357
Member
- Location
- Las vegas
Hi All,
I was talking to an "inspector" on a job site with regard to the use of a GFCI device on a single (single yoke) outlet on a dedicated 120-volt 20-amp appliance circuit. To my knowledge, there is not a Single outlet that has the GFCI hardware on board, GFCI breakers were used to try and comply with NEC 210.8(b)(2). His statement to me was that because of the fact that the single receptacle was dedicated and would only ever be used for that appliance then GFCI protection was no longer a requirement. I have read everything in my code book as far as 210.8, 210.52 and 406. The only thing i can see that is even remotely close to an exception such as stated above is article 406(D)(4) exception (4) but that is referencing Arc-Fault, not GFCI.
All code references are pulled from NEC 2017.
Anyone have any in sight to this issue.
I have reached out to local engineers and the local AHJ from their comments as well. Hoping for a faster opinion here.
Thanks for your time and happy wiring.
I was talking to an "inspector" on a job site with regard to the use of a GFCI device on a single (single yoke) outlet on a dedicated 120-volt 20-amp appliance circuit. To my knowledge, there is not a Single outlet that has the GFCI hardware on board, GFCI breakers were used to try and comply with NEC 210.8(b)(2). His statement to me was that because of the fact that the single receptacle was dedicated and would only ever be used for that appliance then GFCI protection was no longer a requirement. I have read everything in my code book as far as 210.8, 210.52 and 406. The only thing i can see that is even remotely close to an exception such as stated above is article 406(D)(4) exception (4) but that is referencing Arc-Fault, not GFCI.
All code references are pulled from NEC 2017.
Anyone have any in sight to this issue.
I have reached out to local engineers and the local AHJ from their comments as well. Hoping for a faster opinion here.
Thanks for your time and happy wiring.