Panelboard as A/C condensing unit disconnect

Johnhall30

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Homeowner has 5 A/C condensing units located outside at ground level. There is a panelboard directly adjacent to all of the units. All units are within sight of the panelboard.

All of the unit nameplates call for "Max Fuse / Max C.B.", so a fuse is not mandatory per the manufacturer nameplate. The breaker ratings match the MOCP.

Do the circuit breakers in the panelboard qualify as the local disconnect for the unit?

Is this code compliant, or is an additional local disconnect required for each unit?
 
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Are breakers still required to be labeled HACR by the manufacturer?
Might be part of the UL requirement but the only references to "HACR Type" on the breakers label found in the NEC in past three cycles are within the enhanced content of 440.21 and it mentions UL and labeled as "Listed HACR Type". (Searched on NFPA Link for 2014-2026 cycles)
 
Are breakers still required to be labeled HACR by the manufacturer?
Not by UL.
But many inspectors don't keep up with UL so they still ask for a label.

For Schneider Electric you used to need a special order for an HACR label, but I have noticed HACR on some standard breaker.
 
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