Don, I don?t think I am making my point clear to you, and therefore I don?t know whether we have a fundamental disagreement in principle.
First, I do not ?expect? the EC to catch my errors (presuming such things happen).
Secondly, I do not issue a design with the belief that I need not worry about errors. In other words, I do not rely on those ?weasel clauses? to force the blame away from myself and onto the EC.
Finally, if a design error results in a need for changes, I believe that the EC should be paid for the additional costs.
For the sake of clarifying my viewpoint, let?s postulate that I issue a design that includes #14 wire on 20 amp branch circuits, and that I not notice the code violation before the prints get published. Let?s talk about the various ways an EC might act. In all cases, let?s presume that it is the Inspector who catches the error. But keep in mind that in all cases, no action on the part of the EC would excuse my own error.
Case 1: The EC might not notice the code violation, and might build it as-designed. I would call this a matter of the EC not living up to the level of competence promised by the EC license.
Case 2: The EC might notice the code violation, but might build it as-designed anyway, without saying anything about it to anyone, thinking that the engineer must know what is right. I would call this a violation of public trust, in that it would be a failure to protect the safety of the public.
Case 3: The EC might notice the code violation, might recognize an opportunity to get some extra money, might build it as-designed, wait for the Inspector to red tag the installation, and submit a change order to replace the wire. I would call this a violation of the owner?s trust.
I believe that in all three of these cases, the EC should be made to replace the wire at no cost to the owner. This is the very reason for the ?weasel clauses.?
Case 4: The EC might notice the code violation, might inform the owner or the engineer (via an RFI or other means) before the installation begins, and might be told to just do what the drawings say to do. In this case, I believe the EC should be paid the extra money needed to replace the wire.
Do you agree or disagree with my assessment of these four cases?