Ok after reading the many proposals for the 2005, and the CMP comments, I am so cornfused
It's like their saying one voltage is safer then the other?
The submitter for:
2-30 Log #2788 NEC-P02
(210-5(C) (New) )
Proposal is says seeing a brown color wire should be a warning, like seeing a black wire is less dangerous?
But the color part of the proposal was rejected, as was some of the requirements to identify the neutral of a multi-wire circuit which can be just as dangerous, but the decision to remove 210.4(D) and create 210.5(C) was accepted with the removal of the multi-wire language.
So from what I can get out of all this, is the intent of making sure an electrician will know where to shut all the power off to the area (such as a junction box) that he is working in, IMHO 210.5(C) does not address this, as even with one nominal voltage, he/she will still not know where each circuit is fed from or from which panel supplying it.
If this is the true intent, then the only requirement that would achieve this level of safety would be a requirement of marking each access point or termination with the info of where they are supplied from such as I mention in post 20. as others have said also we always mark our junction box's with this info.
IMHO codes like 210.5(C) send the wrong message to many who do not understand that 120 volts can be just as dangerous as 277, the the NEC should not be conveying this message.