resistance said:
******but I would think that your main concern would be the scope of the permit and any obvious safety violations.*********
I'm with minute on the above.
I agree !
obvious safety violations
scope of the permit
Scope of the permit has to be defined.
For a piece of equipment, such as adding AC, the inspection should be
limited to the installation itself only, from the breaker out to the unit.
For a SE and meterbase replacement, I wouldn't look any further than the cable and meterbase.
If the SE is changed all the way to the main panel, I?d stop at the panel connection.
I don?t think you get into a ?mission creep? situation until you replace the main disconnect. At that point you would need to confirm that all electrodes have conductors at the panel to be connected to the new main, add conductors to all electrodes that are present in the building if conductors are missing, and add a ground rod if necessary. Hotwater to coldwater bonding jumper, watermeter bonding jumper, and bonding metal pipes that aren?t part of an electrode.
But the ?mission creep? on a service main upgrade/replacement should not be required to include changes to any of the branch circuits. As long as the proper size breakers are used for the HR wires, there shouldn?t be a requirement to correct mistakes in circuiting of restricted load circuits [210.11(C)] or adding AFCIs or other circuit changes. Feeders would have to have separate grounding and neutral conductors connected to and
leaving the main but their termination and separation in preexisting feeder panels is beyond the scope of the permit.
I don?t believe 210.63 should be required unless there is new equipment being installed. I don?t think 210.52(G) should come up either unless there was new walls, new equipment, or new/extended branch circuit work going on in that room.
As far as obvious safety violations that are seen but that don?t involve the scope of the work. Because they don?t involve the scope of the work, these should be handled with the
property owner and not required to be performed by the contractor that is there for other work. His permit and inspections shouldn?t be held ?hostage? for problems on the site that are beyond the scope of his work. He has the right to bid on only part of a job just as the property owner has the right to choose to use one electrical contractor for all of the work or split up the work into several pieces, each piece with it?s own limited scope.
Each contractor is only responsible for the scope determined by his contract. The property owner is responsible for the whole thing.
David