crossman
Senior Member
- Location
- Southeast Texas
I'm with Pierre on this one... learn something new every day.
That's how it gets interpreted here.Pierre C Belarge said:250.53(D)(2) would seem by the wording to not permit the installation of the supplemental electrode for the the cold water to be bonded/attached to the cold water electrode within the first 5 ft of the entrance to the building.
Chamuit said:That's how it gets interpreted here.
The other day I had a disagreement with an Inspector. I had installed GFCI's in on old apartment kitchen. The apartment was an old ungrounded system. Article 406.3(D)(3)(b) allows for this. The Inspector told me that I could not do what I did because:
1. His GFCI Receptacle Tester did not work. (Because it relies on the ground wire to create a fault.)
2. Also, he had "never seen that done in his ten years as an inspector."
It was all I could do to not call him every name in the book.
Anyway, he told me he was going to have to check on this. I called him back the next day with a photocopy of the article and a diagram showing how a GFCI actually works. I faxed them to him. He finally saw the light.
One more thing to add, even though your installation might be technically correct, sometimes you run into jurisdictional wiring methods. That is to say what you did may not be the common way to do such-and-such job for your area. Just my 2? + tax, title, and doc fees.
I have all but banned splices in my projects, but now and then they are unavoidable.roger said:Well, I guess there would be no splices that would make the grade if you were inspecting. :grin:
Roger
petersonra said:But there is a big difference between inspecting to the code and inspecting to a stricter specification.
rookie4now said:Hi,
My boss tends to "bend" to the requests of the inspector(s) more easily than I wood. He has good reputation with inspectors and maybe he figures that in the long run it is better to pick your battles. I don't necessarily disagree with this, but perhaps I draw the line a little differently than he would.
On a swrvice (which I did) he was present for the inspection and the install failed for three reasons.
1) The grounded service donductor had a splice.
2) The ground rods were attached to the cold water pipe, but the conductor did not continue to the panel. The GEC was a seperate conductor which also attached to the water pipe 3' away (within 5' of the point of entry of the building).
3) There was splicing tape over one service conductor that was nicked during installation.
My comments to my boss were:
1) 230.46 specifically allows for splicing of service conductors. It does not specify grounded or undgounded.
2) 250.52(D)2 "exception" allows me to attach to the water pipe and does not require that the conductor continue to the service panel.
3) I don't have a code section on this one, but I don't know why a nick in a service conductor wouldn't be allowed to be protected with a wrap of rubber tape followed by a covering of electrical tape.
I guess what I am looking for is this. Do you agree that the service is OK? If not, where are the problems. And second, if you agree it's OK, any suggestions for dilpomatically explaining that I'd like to convince the inspector that the install is OK rather than go repull 40' of 2/0 wire for for no good reason. (see, profit sharing does work
Thanks for your input
I don't see how you can repair a nicked wire with tape. nicked insulation yes. once it gets into the conductor tape is not a repair.roger said:And repairing a nicked wire with tape is no more of a code violation than taping over a splice is.
If a job spec prohibited it for some reason it would be another story.
Roger
From post #14:petersonra said:I don't see how you can repair a nicked wire with tape. nicked insulation yes. once it gets into the conductor tape is not a repair.
rookie4now said:...It was just a little nick in the insulation that probably didn't even need tape, I just did it as a precaustion...