- Location
- Chapel Hill, NC
- Occupation
- Retired Electrical Contractor
What part of 240.87 do you think is silly?
Just curious as I am a member of CMP 10.
Chris
The part you wrote
Welcome back
What part of 240.87 do you think is silly?
Just curious as I am a member of CMP 10.
Chris
The part you wrote
Welcome back
I do not want to come off as a curmudgeon, especially as I do not post here that often.
The methods of arc energy reduction allowed in 240.87(B) are difficult to employ, costly and may not be effective if not used properly. In addition, some of these methods (especially arc-flash reduction modes) negate selective coordination when activated. This last reason bothers me the most. After all the arguing over the importance of selective coordination over the last nine years, its kind of ironic that the NEC now mandates systems that will in effect negate it.
Selective coordination has no business being in the NEC, as it's strictly a building design issue.
Arc fault mitigation is an electrician safety issue, however, and most certainly does belong there.
I disagree. The purpose of the NEC is to provide direction to minimize the risk of electrical shock and fires/explosions centered around installation and maintenance. The scope of preventing OCPD cascades in emergency systems should fall to NFPA 110 (or NFPA 99 for hospitals, etc.).Selective coordination does have a place in the NEC when cascading of overcurrent devices would affect life safety features such as emergency lighting, accessible means of egress elevators, smoke control systems etc...
Chris
Agreed. However there is no way to actually mandate that an operator activates a 'maintenance-mode' before working on live equipment.When a breaker has the instantaneous trip function disabled for selectivity purposes it exposes personnel who work on the equipment down stream from the breaker to likely much higher levels of incident energy then if the breaker was equipped with an instantaneous trip function set at or below the available fault current.
708.54 also. These few select instances are mostly concerned with life safety systems (e.g. all the more reason to mandate full selectivity all of the time)When this condition exists it becomes necessary to employ other methods to reduce the arc energy that could result in the case of an accident.
As far as selective coordination is concerned, the NEC only mandates selective coordination in a few select incidences (See 700.28, 701.27 and 620.62) the levels and necessity for selective coordination is usually left up to the design professional and the building owner.
I disagree. The purpose of the NEC is to provide direction to minimize the risk of electrical shock and fires/explosions centered around installation and maintenance. The scope of preventing OCPD cascades in emergency systems should fall to NFPA 110 (or NFPA 99 for hospitals, etc.).
Actually, it does. This is language in the NEC 2014 Handbook, from the NEC Committee itself:The NFPA doesn't back you up on this, IMHO.
And that's the way it should be. Once the NEC Committees start implementing design concepts, all they're gonna do is start contradicting all the other Codes. Selective coordination, lit-faced receptacles in nursing homes... really? Stick to what you do best -- safety and prevention of electrical hazards for trained personnel.The scope of the National Electrical Code Committee is as follows:
This committee shall have primary responsibility for documents on minimizing the risk of electricity as a source of electric shock and as a potential ignition source of fires and explosions. It shall also be responsible for text to minimize the propagation of fire and explosions due to electrical installations.
Agreed. However there is no way to actually mandate that an operator activates a 'maintenance-mode' before working on live equipment.
IMHO, allowing operators to choose between a) low arc-energy and low-selectivity or b) higher arc-faults and selectivity introduces a high probability of improper operation. Don't get me wrong, I am a proponent for the highest level of worker safety, but IMHO there are better ways to achieve this other than mandating complex systems that are difficult to implement and will most likely be misunderstood and misused by the very operators that they are intended to protect.
Actually, it does. This is language in the NEC 2014 Handbook, from the NEC Committee itself:
And that's the way it should be. Once the NEC Committees start implementing design concepts, all they're gonna do is start contradicting all the other Codes. Selective coordination, lit-faced receptacles in nursing homes... really? Stick to what you do best -- safety and prevention of electrical hazards for trained personnel.
So NFPA is supposed to create needless and mindless inconsistencies because some jurisdictions are too lazy to adopt multiple codes and standards? Not to mention that just because Hickville, USA doesn't recognize NFPA 99 doesn't mean that the hospital there isn't mandated to follow those standards in order to get Joint Commission and CDC accreditation for Medicare funding.
According to NFPA, the NEC has a specific purpose and function. And it would be nice to see the various NEC committees take that directive into consideration before dabbling in areas they have no business being involved with in the first place. Because all it does is create a domino effect of headaches for other code committees, consulting engineers, and all the way down to the end users.
90.1 Purpose.
(A) Practical Safeguarding. The purpose of this Code is
the practical safeguarding of persons and property from
hazards arising from the use of electricity. This Code is not
intended as a design specification or an instruction manual
for untrained persons.
It may be splitting hairs, but a local disconnect switch which de-energizes a piece of equipment and clearly makes it safe is a whole lot different than a maintenance mode switch on the trip unit of a circuit breaker. The function of the latter will not necessarily be apparent or understood by even by a qualified operator.Correct, just as there is no way the NEC can mandate that someone use the required local disconnect for a motor, but that does not mean that the NEC should not address disconnecting means. OSHA and NFPA 70E addresses working on or near live parts.
I am not sure that is the case. The way I read the new requirements, 240.87 requires arc-energy mitigation on all circuit breakers 1200A and larger, regardless of instantaneous trip functionality or arc-flash hazard.240.87 is intended to provide means to reduce arc energy when the instantaneous trip function of a circuit breaker is disabled for selectivity purposes. For situations where the instantaneous trip functions are enabled 240.87 does not apply.
Does there not arise a hazard if there is a cascading of overcurrent devices that protect life safety systems?
I disagree. The purpose of the NEC is to provide direction to minimize the risk of electrical shock and fires/explosions centered around installation and maintenance. The scope of preventing OCPD cascades in emergency systems should fall to NFPA 110 (or NFPA 99 for hospitals, etc.).
Actually, it does. This is language in the NEC 2014 Handbook, from the NEC Committee itself:
And that's the way it should be. Once the NEC Committees start implementing design concepts, all they're gonna do is start contradicting all the other Codes. Selective coordination, lit-faced receptacles in nursing homes... really? Stick to what you do best -- safety and prevention of electrical hazards for trained personnel.
240.87 (2014)
700.8 (2014)
700.10(B)
517.41(E) (2014)*
* - This one takes the prize.