You can use pink or purple or brown, any color is free game as long as it isn't green white or gray.
There are only a few cases where the code specifies a color for a hot wire, this isn't one of them.
unless you count local rules like San Francisco specifying purple instead of orange for one the phases w/ 480V, instead of BOY, brown, orange, yellow, it's brown, purple, yellow.
Seriously? WTF?
There is only one, orange for the high leg of 240V delta, unless you count local rules like San Francisco specifying purple instead of orange for one the phases w/ 480V, instead of BOY, brown, orange, yellow, it's brown, purple, yellow.
Sadly, many dont follow lock-out, tag-out rules.
If i ever catch someone not following them under my watch, their *** is gone...
The purple is a marker that you're dealing with 480. That's why they use it - enough people have either been pitched across an open space or sucked into the circuit that they wanted some way to tell people working on it it wasn't 277 or 240 or whatever.
I watched one guy thrown across a grass lot in a county fairgrounds when the 480 circuit he was working on was energized by a ***** thinking he was energizing a local 120 circuit to brew coffee... literally picked up this 300 lb brick of a guy and he landed 75+ yards away. and he was damned lucky he caught the right phase - he could have just as easily been contracted into it. Another acquaintance (RIP) saw someone hooked and contracted into 480 and went to body block him off the wire, and got himself killed when he got contracted into it when he hit the guy.
There's something weird about 480... and thats why some cities (not just SF) has that off-color marker for it.
There is only one, orange for the high leg of 240V delta, unless you count local rules like San Francisco specifying purple instead of orange for one the phases w/ 480V, instead of BOY, brown, orange, yellow, it's brown, purple, yellow.
Seriously? WTF?
i was wondering the same.....:supergay: ???
The connecting wire for heating cables has a color code to identify the supply voltage the heating cable is supposed to be attached to.
SF uses purple because someone was worried that orange and yellow look much alike under poor lighting.
The purple is a marker that you're dealing with 480. That's why they use it - enough people have either been pitched across an open space or sucked into the circuit that they wanted some way to tell people working on it it wasn't 277 or 240 or whatever.
I watched one guy thrown across a grass lot in a county fairgrounds when the 480 circuit he was working on was energized by a ***** thinking he was energizing a local 120 circuit to brew coffee... literally picked up this 300 lb brick of a guy and he landed 75+ yards away. and he was damned lucky he caught the right phase - he could have just as easily been contracted into it. Another acquaintance (RIP) saw someone hooked and contracted into 480 and went to body block him off the wire, and got himself killed when he got contracted into it when he hit the guy.
There's something weird about 480... and thats why some cities (not just SF) has that off-color marker for it.