By code you must have a safety switch within 50 feet and within sight of the spa.Can anyone recommend a product I can use for a 40a 240v spa as an emergency shutdown, I'd like to get one that I could just wire line and load with out relays
Anyone have any experience in doing this? Or are relays needed
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For what purpose? Is this something you want to automate? If so, what condition would you want the circuit to open under? Please provide a little more detail on the proposed function. Thanks.I know this will be in addition to a safety switch
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Excellent idea. I'm assuming you're looking to do like a panic button?Never done it but have thought about it before. You likely have a GFCI breaker supplying the spa, why not just use typical pilot duty E stop switch and run GFCI protected neutral to the switch and a non GFCI neutral or the EGC to the other side of the switch. GFCI will trip on neutral to ground fault function and spa is shut down. Simpler and less costly than finding a breaker with GFCI and with shunt trip.
Someone will bark about it not being listed for that sort of thing.... seems to me it is also an additional GFCI testing function in a way.
Disconnect can also be the emergency shutdown. Pretty sure it needs labeled as such. This would commonly apply to packaged spa units.its my understanding and maybe im wrong but don't you need an estop function in a commercial setting say an air bnb or hotel in addition to a standard disconnect? or could the disconnect act as the emergency shutdown
680.41 contains the requirements.I understand so for my install specifically I can just probably get away with the disconnect
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YesSo for your GFCI solution, kwired, would you simply wire the e stop to ground out the neutral?
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Yes, you need E stop/panic buttonits my understanding and maybe im wrong but don't you need an estop function in a commercial setting say an air bnb or hotel in addition to a standard disconnect? or could the disconnect act as the emergency shutdown
BrilliantYes
If you don't like the idea of making a neutral-ground connection you can bring the GFCI protected neutral and a non GFCI protected neutral to the switch and you still have the same thing as far as the GFCI is concerned.
it probably would be easier to just feed through a contactor and wire the estop to coil