jumper
Senior Member
- Location
- 3 Hr 2 Min from Winged Horses
Wouldn't be easier to add another light fixture??
:thumbsup:
Wouldn't be easier to add another light fixture??
Wouldn't be easier to add another light fixture??
I think this chain of logic precludes doing this.
However, I suspect you could buy a device that is not a whole lot more than a contactor to accomplish the same thing as long as it is listed properly.
To me bypass would mean you have a control in parallel with the regular control - maybe a contactor contact that is in parallel with a wall switch. You are talking about bringing entirely different source to power the same load, and likely providing some sort of isolation so it can't backfeed into the circuit from the first source. If transfer occurred upstream, then you would be "bypassing" the switch in the original circuit but still supplying with same circuit - only change is in the switching arrangements.After researching this, I've realized that what we are actually accomplishing here is an emergency bypass, not a transfer. The actual transfer to emergency power happens way upstream. What we are doing is bypassing wall switches to make sure that the allocated emergency fixtures come on.
This would not be an issue in most environments, as the fixtures designated as emergency lights in an area (e.g., a warehouse floor) would not go out when the wall switch is turned off at the end of the day. Our environment (a theatre), requires that all lights go out when switched. In this case, I believe that UL924 applies -- on power loss, we're simply bypassing the wall switch and returning the fixture to emergency power.
So, then, a better question would have been:
For a fixture that will accept both voltages, would it be acceptable to use a UL924 certified relay as an emergency bypass, with 120 volts across the NO contacts and 277 on the NC contacts?
After researching this, I've realized that what we are actually accomplishing here is an emergency bypass, not a transfer. The actual transfer to emergency power happens way upstream. What we are doing is bypassing wall switches to make sure that the allocated emergency fixtures come on.
This would not be an issue in most environments, as the fixtures designated as emergency lights in an area (e.g., a warehouse floor) would not go out when the wall switch is turned off at the end of the day. Our environment (a theatre), requires that all lights go out when switched. In this case, I believe that UL924 applies -- on power loss, we're simply bypassing the wall switch and returning the fixture to emergency power.
So, then, a better question would have been:
For a fixture that will accept both voltages, would it be acceptable to use a UL924 certified relay as an emergency bypass, with 120 volts across the NO contacts and 277 on the NC contacts?