K8MHZ
Senior Member
- Occupation
- Electrician
More of us get killed by 120 volts than any other voltage.
By 'us' do you mean humans or electricians?
More of us get killed by 120 volts than any other voltage.
By 'us' do you mean humans or electricians?
The hard question is, where exactly do you draw the line?
and the saftey guys will tell you to perform an AF study on every panel you open up.
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I'm trying to figure out how to join in the conversation without adding any fuel to anyone's fire I realized that every time this topic comes up, I find myself cheering both sides of the argument, as strange as that sounds, and it's encouraged me to do some more digging for information online. One of the things about these arguments I've noticed is that the regulations are there to protect against both arc-flash and shock hazards but the lines get blurred here in the forum. I don't think there are many electricians who work in residential or light commercial (300V or less, low amperage systems) who have seen or dealt with an arc-flash incident. Sparks, yes, arc-flashes not so much. Guys who deal with larger systems feel the danger a whole lot more. Because of that, I think there's a lot of resistance to talk about arc-flash danger and the imposed mitigation techniques from the guys who aren't feeling threatened and who work in environments where mitigation is not part of a daily routine. Most residential or light commercial customers will be very unpleasantly surprised and confused by the news that all power must be shut down for what seem like simple tasks while in other cases POCOs may not support a de-energizing policy or the fact that multiple customers would be affected would make de-energizing much more complicated. On the other hand, resistance to PPE and safe work practices from the resi/lightcom guys is stupid when viewed from a shock hazard perspective.
I do think that applying really strict (no energized work - period) rules to less than 300V nominal residential systems is counter-productive lawmaking for a number of reasons. If the shock hazard can be mitigated with proper PPE and training provided, I feel that live work can be done safely and should be allowed on these systems since the arc-flash hazard is minimal (based on the statistics for arc-flash incidents, or lack of them, for these systems found online). Regularly pulling meters is not a safe option since many of the older meter sockets may pose a much greater arc hazard when the meter is pulled than the worker would be exposed to in a fully energized panel. As many of us have noticed, not all POCOs are timely about hooking up customers when called and some (like the one around here) won't even send a crew to reconnect an aerial service - that's the electrician's job. I can't call in a broken neutral unless I've confirmed that the connections in the meter base are good which you can't do de-energized, nor can the "boss" run around and be the one doing what OSHA forbids employees to do. Finally, complete bans on energized work create a dangerous environment of "under the radar" work habits that are even more likely to ignore PPE for shock hazard, ultimately causing greater risks to workers.
I've never seen, heard of or read of an arc-flash incident on a residential or light commercial system, but I have been shocked, I've known a lot of other guys who have been shocked and I remember every single time a local electrician was killed by electrocution. In spite of that, there still isn't one supply house or box store in a fifty mile radius of where I live and work that sells any kind of PPE for shock hazard mitigation. The ONLY place I know locally to buy any kind of PPE is Grainger. Some 1000V tools are easily available but their quality is questionable. Rubber mats, face shields, FR clothing? All special order. For small contractors, conforming isn't so black and white and what's worse, lack of available PPE makes mitigating shock hazard difficult. That's why I cheer the stronger regulations. They'll eventually make it easier to work safely. In the meantime, it just feels like I'm peeking through the looking glass when I read these threads because what I see just totally looks like a separate reality.
and the saftey guys will tell you to perform an AF study on every panel you open up. ...
I just watched the TV show, "HOW IT'S MADE".
New electric meters. the power company can remotely shut off the house with a wireless command.
But I wonder what the intended use is ? and if they will roll it out to all existing customers, or only new construction.
This is not true.The value at the last limiting device can be used for the arc flash. Line resistance from that point to the panel will reduce the risk.
This is not true.
If the line resistance lowers the fault current below the current limiting point of the protective device, the incident energy may increase substantially, due to the longer clearing time.
Agreed, though to many I think this seems counter intuitive. I think part of the problem is the lack of understanding in general of available fault current and incident energy. It seems to me that we in the industry don't spend nearly enough time on the how and why of arc flash. I believe the vast majority of electricians work in live panels with very little understanding of the risk. It's part of the culture.
This is not true.
If the line resistance lowers the fault current below the current limiting point of the protective device, the incident energy may increase substantially, due to the longer clearing time.
I was pointing out that you cannot make a blanket statement that downstream equipment will always have lower PPE requirements than at an upstream current limiting fuse.Okay, before replying I went back through the device data sheets. For example, our typical fuse is Bussmann LPS-RK30SP. To drop below the current limiting point of the device requires dropping below 500A.
Bussmann lists the incident energy to be .25cal/cm2 with a 6" boundary.
Other system specs are 480Vac with worst case bolted fault current from the preceeding transformer of 75kA.
Per your statement I should be worried about the line length from the transformer to this buss head changing the incident energy and PPE requirements?
I was pointing out that you cannot make a blanket statement that downstream equipment will always have lower PPE requirements than at an upstream current limiting fuse.
Actually, it takes about 305A to have a 35A LPS-RK1 fuse enter its 'incident energy reduction' region for <1.2 cal/cm?, so this small size may not be the best fuse to use in this discussion.
I just finished an exercise to demonstrate how critical it is to not estimate conductor length. With a 110A RK1 fuse an additional 30' of conductor meant going from <1.2cal/cm? up to >8.0 cal/cm?.
... 75kA (Bolted Fault) service.....
The problem is when the fault current is not very high. When you enter the area of typical branch circuits, low fault currents are not uncommon.
At 2.3kA a LPS-400RK will not reduce the arc flash hazard below 8 cal/cm?, in fact it could take more than 7 secs to clear this low of a fault. By the same token a fault current of 3.5kA will yield a maximum of 1.2 cal/cm?. This fuse enters its current limiting region around 9kA.
The problem is when the fault current is not very high. When you enter the area of typical branch circuits, low fault currents are not uncommon..