This is a spill over from another thread where I said that the 25 foot limit of 210.63 was stupid. Here's the problem with the real life application of the 25 foot rule.
The electrical in 50 to 75% of all of the houses that go up in our county are done by the lowest bidder that is pursuing work with the builder. They bid by code and only get more money for a very short list of extras:
Bigger service than what would be demanded by load calc
More switching thruout the house than required by NEC
So 210.52(E) is 2 plugs and 2 plugs paid for only. And that's the way it stays.
Most houses around here have either a back porch or deck where people hang out and entertain. The natural place for the back plug is on or right next to that porch/deck. That plug gets 365 days a year of use or something close to that amount.
The closest plug to the AC gets a servicing tool plugged into it maybe once a year, or more likely only one single time in 2 to 10 years. But the back plug is required by 210.63 to be within 25 feet of the AC so the back plug gets moved from its best location to a point on the house that's within 25 feet of the AC.
Now this is what pisses me off.
Just so that the AC service guy can stroll in with only a 25 foot cord once every 1 to 10 years, there are extension cords run across the back of the house to the back porch/deck 365 days of the year.
I see this all the time and it just pisses me off that it's being done for no good reason. And before anybody responds by saying that the electrician should just install a 3rd outside plug, the builder won't pay for it and there's no owner yet if it's a spec house. I personally would just throw in the 3rd plug because it irritates me so much to see the result pandering to the HVAC service workers lobbyists. But most elec contractors aren't willing to give anything away after they've been beat so badly by the builders just to get the job.
So all of the back yards have extension cords permanently strung across the back wall, some neatly tucked into the long grass next to the basement block wall and others disguised in the mulch bed.
Thanks for paying attention. I feel better now that I've said my piece.
David
The electrical in 50 to 75% of all of the houses that go up in our county are done by the lowest bidder that is pursuing work with the builder. They bid by code and only get more money for a very short list of extras:
Bigger service than what would be demanded by load calc
More switching thruout the house than required by NEC
So 210.52(E) is 2 plugs and 2 plugs paid for only. And that's the way it stays.
Most houses around here have either a back porch or deck where people hang out and entertain. The natural place for the back plug is on or right next to that porch/deck. That plug gets 365 days a year of use or something close to that amount.
The closest plug to the AC gets a servicing tool plugged into it maybe once a year, or more likely only one single time in 2 to 10 years. But the back plug is required by 210.63 to be within 25 feet of the AC so the back plug gets moved from its best location to a point on the house that's within 25 feet of the AC.
Now this is what pisses me off.
Just so that the AC service guy can stroll in with only a 25 foot cord once every 1 to 10 years, there are extension cords run across the back of the house to the back porch/deck 365 days of the year.
I see this all the time and it just pisses me off that it's being done for no good reason. And before anybody responds by saying that the electrician should just install a 3rd outside plug, the builder won't pay for it and there's no owner yet if it's a spec house. I personally would just throw in the 3rd plug because it irritates me so much to see the result pandering to the HVAC service workers lobbyists. But most elec contractors aren't willing to give anything away after they've been beat so badly by the builders just to get the job.
So all of the back yards have extension cords permanently strung across the back wall, some neatly tucked into the long grass next to the basement block wall and others disguised in the mulch bed.
Thanks for paying attention. I feel better now that I've said my piece.
David