Poor design choice

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Re: Poor design choice

Originally posted by infinity:
Bob, what article are you saying requires 2 SA's in the dining room?
The same one that requires two in the kitchen. :)

210.52(B) (1) Receptacle Outlets Served. In the kitchen, pantry, breakfast room, dining room, or similar area of a dwelling unit, the two or more 20-ampere small-appliance branch circuits required by 210.11(C)(1) shall serve all receptacle outlets covered by 210.52(A) and (C) and receptacle outlets for refrigeration equipment.
 
Re: Poor design choice

Originally posted by iwire:
Originally posted by infinity:
Bob, what article are you saying requires 2 SA's in the dining room?
The same one that requires two in the kitchen. :)

210.52(B) (1) Receptacle Outlets Served. In the kitchen, pantry, breakfast room, dining room, or similar area of a dwelling unit, the two or more 20-ampere small-appliance branch circuits required by 210.11(C)(1) shall serve all receptacle outlets covered by 210.52(A) and (C) and receptacle outlets for refrigeration equipment.
You could even stretch that to mean that every receptacle must be supplied from two circuits!

Maybe it should say " . . . one of the two or more . . . "

[ January 21, 2006, 08:04 PM: Message edited by: LarryFine ]
 
Re: Poor design choice

I'm reading that as the 2 or more. This doesn't imply that the dining room must have both. If I had, more, say 6 SA's, would they all have to go to the dining room as well?
 
Re: Poor design choice

Originally posted by infinity:
If I had, more, say 6 SA's, would they all have to go to the dining room as well?
No only the two as 210.11(C)(1) (IMO) never requires more than two.
 
Re: Poor design choice

Originally posted by iwire:
Originally posted by infinity:
If I had, more, say 6 SA's, would they all have to go to the dining room as well?
No only the two as 210.11(C)(1) (IMO) never requires more than two.
I would have to disagree that the dining room requires more than one SA circuit. 210.52(B)(3) states that the countertop must be served by not fewer than two SA circuits. It goes on to say that either or both shall be permitted to supply receptacles in the other rooms specified in 210.52(B)(1).


(3) Kitchen Receptacle Requirements. Receptacles installed in a kitchen to serve countertop surfaces shall be supplied by not fewer than two small-appliance branch circuits, either or both of which shall also be permitted to supply receptacle outlets in the same kitchen and in other rooms specified in 210.52(B)(1). Additional small-appliance branch circuits shall be permitted to supply receptacle outlets in the kitchen and other rooms specified in 210.52(B)(1). No small-appliance branch circuit shall serve more than one kitchen.
 
Re: Poor design choice

Originally posted by infinity:
I would have to disagree that the dining room requires more than one SA circuit. 210.52(B)(3) states that the countertop must be served by not fewer than two SA circuits. It goes on to say that either or both shall be permitted to supply receptacles in the other rooms specified in 210.52(B)(1).


(3) Kitchen Receptacle Requirements. Receptacles installed in a kitchen to serve countertop surfaces shall be supplied by not fewer than two small-appliance branch circuits, either or both of which shall also be permitted to supply receptacle outlets in the same kitchen and in other rooms specified in 210.52(B)(1). Additional small-appliance branch circuits shall be permitted to supply receptacle outlets in the kitchen and other rooms specified in 210.52(B)(1). No small-appliance branch circuit shall serve more than one kitchen.
Trevor I have to disagree with your disagreement. :D

IMO all 210.52(B)(1) requires is that at least two of the SA circuits end up serving the counter top.

In other words I can not use one SA circuit to feed all the 'low' kitchen wall outlets and the other SA circuit to serve all the countertop outlets.

It also tells us those same circuits can serve the pantry, breakfast room, dining room, similar areas of a dwelling units, or we can install additional circuits to serve those areas that meet the SA circuit requirements.

But in all cases IMO 210.52(B)(1) requires at least two SA circuits to be installed in kitchens, pantries, breakfast rooms, dining rooms, or similar areas of a dwelling units

That is how I have always understood it and done it.

You do have me questioning it, I may be wrong.
 
Re: Poor design choice

Originally posted by georgestolz:
...either or both of which shall also be permitted to supply receptacle outlets in the same kitchen and in other rooms specified in 210.52(B)(1).
I'm with Trevor on this one. :)
Yes one or both of the two circuits that section requires serving the countertop can be used in the other rooms. :)

However another code section 210.52(B)(1) requires two SA circuits in the 'other' locations regardless if either or both are the same circuits serving the counter tops.

210.52(B) (1) Receptacle Outlets Served. In the kitchen, pantry, breakfast room, dining room, or similar area of a dwelling unit, the two or more 20-ampere small-appliance branch circuits required by 210.11(C)(1) shall serve all receptacle outlets covered by 210.52(A) and (C) and receptacle outlets for refrigeration equipment.

[ January 22, 2006, 11:45 AM: Message edited by: iwire ]
 
Re: Poor design choice

Going that route, the only logical conclusion is that they want both circuits in all receptacle outlets.

That would give us fits with box fill. :D
 
Re: Poor design choice

Originally posted by georgestolz:
Going that route, the only logical conclusion is that they want both circuits in all receptacle outlets.

That would give us fits with box fill. :D
George, that is not a logical conclusion. although that would be acceptable.

The conclusion is that the CMP wants the receptacles in kitchens, pantries, breakfast rooms, dining rooms, or similar areas of a dwelling units to be served by a minimum of two circuits that fit the requirements of SA circuits.

Please explain to me what "two or more 20-ampere small-appliance branch circuits" means if it does not mean at least two?

You have me baffled? :confused:
 
Re: Poor design choice

I think this one is like peeling an onion. It's still an onion no matter how deep you peel it, and you cry more as you keep going. :)
 
Re: Poor design choice

Bob, your argument still can not get past the word either when applying 210.52(B)(3). The only requirement for 2 or more SA circuits in one area is on the kitchen counter. The word either would apply to the dining room or any other outlets in the kitchen except for the countertop.
 
Re: Poor design choice

Trevor, he's got a point. He can read it that way and be correct.

(B)(3) doesn't lose it's context when (B)(1) is read that way, because without (B)(3), we could put one circuit on the wall space receptacles and the other circuit on the counter receptacles and fit with the way Bob is reading (B)(1).

That said, I don't believe the CMP intended it the way Bob is reading it. But I've been wrong before (about an hour before). :D
 
Re: Poor design choice

"...either..." could be brought back into context if there are three circuits.

#1 & #2 serve the countertops.
#2 & #3 serve the dining room.
#3 also serves the fridge...
 
Re: Poor design choice

Thanks George.

Originally posted by georgestolz:
That said, I don't believe the CMP intended it the way Bob is reading it. :D
I am not sure why you can not imagine wanting two circuits in the dinning room.

It might be cause I am old...er. :D

Let me explain, now it seem most houses combine the dinning kitchen area, but when I was growing up these areas where separate rooms.

When my folks entertained it would not be in the kitchen, it would be in the dinning room.

In the dinning room be coffee makers, hot plates, "Fondue warmers" maybe a Lava Lamp ;) , etc. The kind of items that eat up an entire circuit.

It is for this type of use I believe that the CMP intends two circuits in these areas.

But now of course I am just guessing at the intent.

Forgetting intent I do not see how we can ignore two or more

[ January 22, 2006, 01:21 PM: Message edited by: iwire ]
 
Re: Poor design choice

So what do you do if the 'similar area' (or dining room) has only one required receptacle? It happens. :)

(Remembering that the code only calls for a single receptacle at the wall spacing requirements, not a duplex.)

I think if they intended for each room to have two circuits, then they'd include language like what we see in (B)(3) for countertops, IMO.
 
Re: Poor design choice

Originally posted by georgestolz:
So what do you do if the 'similar area' (or dining room) has only one required receptacle? It happens. :)
Well in that case you could break the tab on the duplex and feed it two circuit. I doubt their are many spaces you actually install single receptacles. :p

Now what I have I done when there was a small pantry? I put in one circuit and moved on, knowing full well most inspectors have common sense. :p

Originally posted by georgestolz:
I think if they intended for each room to have two circuits, then they'd include language like what we see in (B)(3) for counter tops, IMO.
So if that is what they meant why does it say what it says.

"two or more" is a far cry from "one of" or "either" etc.

You already suspect what I suspect about the reason why we have (B)(3).

Leaving (B)(3) out would allow only one circuit on the counter tops.
 
Re: Poor design choice

Bob, we have to exclude the real world from our discussion. I have never intentionally fed a dining room with two circuits, never been called on it, and I'll betcha 99% of the residential guys would chime in and have a similar story. Betcha 99% of the inspectors are taking a double-take, 'cause they've never looked at it that way. :D

(B)(1) is laying requirements for the receptacles installed per 210.52(A) & (C).

(A) & (C) gives a stink what we really do, we might install a duplex in the real world, but (A) & (C) are looking for a receptacle.

So, legally, what do you do with one receptacle?

Got to go now, and watch my Broncos win the championship. :D :D :D
 
Re: Poor design choice

210.11(C)(1) Defines as to what branch circuits are and will be Small-Appliance Branch Circuits.
If they feed receptacles outlets specified by 210.52(B), they are SA circuits and are required to meet the requirements for a SA circuit.

210.52(B)(1) this the second part to what a SA circuit can serve, in no way does it say that all these rooms have to have all the SA circuits we might run, ran to each room.
Instead it is defining that the receptacle outlets In the kitchen, pantry, breakfast room, dining room, or similar area of a dwelling unit, are to be fed by a SA circuit that follows the rules for a SA circuit. It also states: "and receptacle outlets for refrigeration equipment"
Which in Bob's context would require us to feed one refrigerator with both SA circuits. Does that make sense?
I'm not picking on you bob :D
I'm just trying to show that 210.11(C)(1) along with 210.52(B)(1) is just to show what receptacle outlets are to be on the two or more SA branch circuits.
And this is clearly spelled out in 210.52(B)(3) where it states:
either or both of which shall also be permitted to supply receptacle outlets in the same kitchen and in other rooms specified in 210.52(B)(1)
And the fact that in areas where it does want both SA circuits to feed the area it states so:
Receptacles installed in a kitchen to serve counter-top surfaces shall be supplied by not fewer than two small-appliance branch circuits
In most small homes there would never be a need for more than one SA circuit in a dining room pantry or breakfast room, much less both having to serve the refrigerator as it does state also.

And the fact that 210.52(B)(3) clearly allows us to feed these other rooms with additional SA branch circuits.

I just posted about a inspector who tried to say that that same wording was to require all the rooms or areas mention in 210.52(B)(1) have to be fed by the same two circuits that feeds the counter? Go figure :confused:
It can be read "HERE"

[ January 22, 2006, 04:34 PM: Message edited by: hurk27 ]
 
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