I am the alternate to Robert Kauer on CMP 10. We both had the same issue and that is why we wrote that explanation.
I am working to fix this issue for the 2017 code.
Chris
Most any place the code says "or approved eqivalent", is screwed up - 240.87 is a good example.
Will all the inspectors that understand IEEE 1584 please raise their hand. Hummm - out of 10,000 inspectors, seven raised their hand.
Okay - of you seven, how many will spend the time to verify a solution is equivalent? Okay one left.
And since it has to be an "approved" equivalent, what is your plan if the design engineer did not meet your design preference? Interesting - now designs are based on the phase of the moon, or perhaps which side of the bed the inspector got up on
This is not a slam on inspectors - it is a comment on training, expertice, and funding.
How to fix? Well, if CP 10 wants to move the NEC farther into being a design guide - do nothing. The section becomes just another design mandate to get around by throwing money at it. Near as I can tell - all one has to do is pick a CB where the Instaneous can be set up out of the way if needed. Perfectly useless, meets code, costs money
If the code panel goal is reduction of arc-flash to where an incident is survivalable - then say so. Whoops - can't do that. Even with the instantaneous set, some lineups have in excess of 40cal/cm^2
No, this is in there because some other code panel (or was that under CP10 as well) demanded coordination. Some AHJ interpret as requiring coordiination to zero time. The only way to do that is to ditch the instantaneous. CP10 is putting a bandaid on an infected toe.
Or, CP 10 could change to "designed under engineering supervision". "approved equivalent" is useless throw away language - it means NO - use one of the following three because the AHJ has neither the time, inclination, or training to "approve" any other design.
Yes, it is an example of poor code - You (plural) are writing a design guide.
ice