rhastings80
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2009
- Messages
- 636
I replied to thier email asking to clairfy if that means its safe and got no response. I was disapointed.
I've repaired lots of bus stabs and whole bus failures on all sorts of buildings. The fires have all been contained by the enclosures.
All I have ever discovered is scorched paint on the deadfronts and smoke leaking from inside.
Hardly a Major Fire Hazard
So. According to the piss poor engineering, this is ok. Hopefully if someone down the road has a house burn down over this, they find this thread and have evidence for the court case.
I think I'd create a doc that says you failed local electrical inspection.. Or actually get it failed...
On what grounds? The panel carries a UL certification, and was not recalled by the manufacturer. While it clearly has a manufacturing defect, both are standing by the fact that it should be safe to use, and no inspector has the right to override that.
I think I'd create a doc that says you failed local electrical inspection...
I think I'd create a doc that says you failed local electrical inspection.. Or actually get it failed.
And I'd provide him info on the (BR?) breakers that are installed.
Note, per NEC they all need to be Eaton BR breakers in that panel (or so I've been told).
Best case is what though? They provide you a new load center, probably under $200 - so decide what your time is worth....
I think I'd create a doc that says you failed local electrical inspection.. Or actually get it failed.
And I'd provide him info on the (BR?) breakers that are installed.
Note, per NEC they all need to be Eaton BR breakers in that panel (or so I've been told).
Best case is what though? They provide you a new load center, probably under $200 - so decide what your time is worth....
For what it's worth, I know a good number of electricians that will not install a CH panel. There are numerous reports of issues with the panels and especially the breakers not tripping going back over 15 years and last time I looked (several years ago now) they still hadn't resolved their issues.
I only found this out after I'd installed a CH panel in my previous shop - an electrician friend told me about several CH panels he'd personally seen fail after only a few years... One of which started a fire that almost burned down a house. I was a shocked (no pun intended) when I did some digging and saw how many fires and investigations were linked to these panels.
A little googling will show how many unresolved issues they have with the regulating authorities.
Even if they have resolved the issues, I couldn't trust a company that kept selling a product like this especially for household use.
Care to add a few links when I Google images” Eaton panel fire” I get nothing. If I enter “CH panel fire” the 2 images that come up are old as dirt.
Walta
For what it's worth, I know a good number of electricians that will not install a CH panel. There are numerous reports of issues with the panels and especially the breakers not tripping going back over 15 years and last time I looked (several years ago now) they still hadn't resolved their issues.
I only found this out after I'd installed a CH panel in my previous shop - an electrician friend told me about several CH panels he'd personally seen fail after only a few years... One of which started a fire that almost burned down a house. I was a shocked (no pun intended) when I did some digging and saw how many fires and investigations were linked to these panels.
A little googling will show how many unresolved issues they have with the regulating authorities.
Even if they have resolved the issues, I couldn't trust a company that kept selling a product like this especially for household use.
Well said, inspectors do not get to turn down listed equipment as long as it is being used per listing, labeling, & instructions.
Who told you that? Its BS...
Here's a reference, but I can find several:
https://www.nachi.org/forum/f19/mix-breakers-siemans-panel-87505/
Seems that UL allows manufacturers to specify which breakers are "compatible" - as such manufacturers don't tend to indicate that their load centers are compatible with alternate manufacturer breakers.
Basically, as I read it, it's "up to the manufacturer". And they typically say "no".
Will any BR breaker work in a BR panel? If I didn't know better, I'd say that I've done it.
Here's a reference, but I can find several:
https://www.nachi.org/forum/f19/mix-breakers-siemans-panel-87505/
So my house has an Eaton CH, and I was under the belief that they were a higher quality panel with a lifetime warranty on the buss bar. my house has 2 Eaton CH panels, so I purchased 3rd 42 slot for my garage.
I installed the panel in the fall, and have just a few breakers in the panel. I was looking at some wiring and noticed a flaw in a lug. looked like the copper was hard when bending occurred and it caused a crack in the lug. Then I noticed ALL the lugs were cracked. Most lugs had multiple cracks, and all in the same place.
I called Eaton, they asked for pictures. I sent pictures then they wanted a picture of the panel sticker. I sent that. Then I get this in return:
"Hi ______,
This happens to be a CH type load center NEMA 1 , referring to the image below, I am not sure how these cuts coming up, hope the breakers installed were correct part numbers, also would like to understand the question you are referring to in the last mail."
Instantly blaming me for something that is clearly their issue! The only breakers installed were the ones that came in the box, along with an additional 3. All the slots that are open NEVER had a breaker installed on them.
If you purchased an Eaton CH panel recently, go check your lugs for cracking.
Since you took the time to tape one conductor red, the red conductor is supposed to be on the 2nd leg instead of the first. Yes I know it's irrelevant, only mentioned it because you taped one of the hots.
supposed to? according to who?
The better question is, who bothers to phase tape when you have a single phase system? It makes absolutely no difference.
The only time code mandates a color is white or gray for neutral and orange for B phase in a 120/240V delta.