MushCreek
Well-known member
My head hurts.....
Its a long story that could be shortened but its actually a probe in to the human mind. Take 2 basic commodity things, very similar and throw a brand and a couple opinions and you would think there is night and day difference. People pay double for that but 25 cents a difference for a gallon of milk sells.
It all boils down to risk reward and selling the perception is way more profitable than increasing ultimate quality.
you always have the option of moving to a county in the US or to Latin America where permits and inspections aren't required.
Recently there was a thread about inspectors looking at connections and how it's not done because they don't have time. I'd suspect that bad connections would be the leading cause of fires started in the actual house wiring, which isn't a common occurrence anyway. Not so sure what is actually being inspected, admittedly I have little experience in it.
I don't do much wiring but did do 1 job that was "inspected" in a nearby town for a friend. I wasn't there for the inspection, but was told the inspector was only there for about 5 minutes and did a cursory glance around and passed it based on it being neat and orderly. Huh???? That's the criteria?
I live in an area where there are no inspections. The county wanted to organize an inspection department, but a handful of rural townships voted to not join, seeing it as just a money grab. So they run their county department in the cities and suburban areas and leave us country hicks to our own devices. I'm perfectly happy with being responsible for myself. I don't need to pay (insert your local cost here) to have a casual chat with someone with 12 more houses to visit before the end of the day.
That said, I do think having a code is a good idea. Takes care of a lot of the engineering that needs to be done in any installation. It's not perfect, but a good guideline to go by. I can't feel too confident that the typical inspection is really advancing the cause of safety as far as some may think it does.




My head hurts.....
2 words : arc fault
Yes, I know that most residential fires are cause by electrical issues, but I have not seen many (any ?) residents in my metro area where the initial source of combustion was an arc in an outlet.
Two recent reports – one from the National
Fire Protection Agency (NFPA)a and one from
the National Association of State Fire Marshals
(NASFM)b – estimate that 50 to 75 percent of
all electrical home fires in the United States
are caused by arc fault conditions. Data from
the National Fire Incident Reporting System
and the NFPA, meanwhile, indicate that
between 1994 and 1998, electrical arcing
caused approximately 48,800 fires annually in
one- and two-family dwellings.
I personally never seen a tornado......so, I guess they don't exist?
http://w3.usa.siemens.com/us/intern...n/SIE_WP_CAFCI_causes_of_electrical_fires.pdf
I can't begin to follow the logic of this thread and whether sberry is for or against inspections. However, my 2 cents is that I'm all for inspections IF they are carried out consistently and judiciously by all involved. One problem is that all too often "inspections" are used as money makers for the jurisdictions involved and not to truly ensure safe building practices.
That's not the only issue. It isn't uncommon for inspectors, even from the same office, to apply and/or interpret codes differently and inconsistently. Inspectors are humans with their own experiences, training, and background and usually have their own "pet peaves." One example that comes up often is the definition of "subject to damage." Some inspectors say wiring below 6' must be in conduit or behind a wall covering. Others say ANY exposed wiring must be protected. But it's not just things that are open to interpretation that are inconsistent. A lot of inspectors choose to focus on one or two code references to enforce. Sometimes it's because they've seen a lot of violations in a particular area. Sometimes it's because they feel those are the "important" codes. Occasionally, and I'm not saying it's the norm, it's because they are lazy or even corrupt.
Again, too often, building inspectors may be biased by who they are dealing with. There shouldn't be any difference in code enforcement whether the work is done by a homeowner, contractor A, contractor B, or contractor C. Anyone who has been involved and paid attention has seen shortcuts and sub-par work done by supposedly seasoned professionals. I understand that "amateurs" are less likely to know the codes and therefore violate them unintentionally. Many times they know they aren't doing it right and hope to get away with it. However, pros are more likely to know exactly what they can get away with and sometimes don't care.
Building and electrical codes are sold to the public by politicians as a way to ensure consistently safe building practices and that's what they should be. As long as the true purpose of inspections is to meet this promise, they are consistently applied to everyone involved, and aren't unreasonably expensive, I have no problem with them.
So when are you announcing that youre running for public office?Yikes... Waaay too much ****ing to read all the OP's posts.
All I know is:
As a professional engineer, I spent an entire career protecting the health, welfare and safety of the public on construction projects, public and private. Engineers everywhere take this role very seriously, as did I. I can't think of a single instance where I thought any code rule was ridiculous or arbitrary and ought to be ignored or relaxed.
Codes and Regulations do not arbitrarily have things in them or because there is pressure from lawyers or manufacturers or lobbying from any other interest group. Rules are created after a long consultation and review process on committees with reps. from different sectors of the particular trade in question (electrical, plumbing, structural, etc.). In some cases it can take many years before a new rule comes into effect or changed. It's an ongoing evolving process as new issues in the industry come to light and as new technology comes into play. If you think a particular rule needs to be modified, make a submission to the code committee in question.
Codes, regulations and standards are there to protect you, the public at large or new owners of your property years later. Unfortunately, some just can't see that. Maybe you don't care about yourself, but when it comes to building construction, you should care about others around you or in the future. If someone doesn't think codes matter, you always have the option of moving to a county in the US or to Latin America where permits and inspections aren't required.

Twice, (on two different houses) I have seen severe arcing inside of the walls where rodents chewed the wires.
Here is a pic of one:
View media item 50119
The insulation is completely gone off the hot wire, you just can't tell because they are oxidized from mouse piss. The mouse had filled the wall cavity up with dried seeds and poop and this wiring was in the middle of that. I don't know why it didn't light up. Had to have been that way for 20-30 years. The circuit worked fine. You can see there was only minor arcing.
On another remodel, same deal only the wire damage was much higher up in the wall but the stud the wire was next to had smoke damage and the hole where the wire passed through was charred. That circuit worked fine too....don't know how that didn't light up either.
That's why I support arc faults.
It just makes sense. All the bases are covered. Overcurrent protection causing damage, chaffed wires arcing below the current threshold causing possible fire and GFCI protection to protect the end user from electrocution.
Yeah who needs codes and inspections. It's okay to run a line over the attic scuttle... isn't it? Sure! The home owner can just push that live wire aside to get up into the attic to change the AC filter.
Bonus: because of the roof trusses and not enough slack in the wire, they can't move it. I suppose one can cut the wire and install a jbox 6' from the hole and route a new cable from there. If that is allowed.
But wait, that's not all; as another added bonus, a live wire that was just sticking up out of the insulation in the attic. Not capped, not taped. I can only assume was to be for a light to the hall closet that was never installed. There is a nice switch in the hall about 5' off the floor for it.
codes and inspections? I'd settle for just a little common sense.
This is the main reason why I'm not a fan boy of Romex. This doesn't occur with an undamaged piped system, unless you're talking about large feeders that have large overcurrent protection. Rodents generally don't chew through emt. Adding arc faults to a piped system is a waste in my book. I'll take a piped system over arc faults any day of the week.
Codes and Regulations do not arbitrarily have things in them or because there is pressure from lawyers or manufacturers or lobbying from any other interest group. Rules are created after a long consultation and review process on committees with reps. from different sectors of the particular trade in question (electrical, plumbing, structural, etc.).
********! Complete and total ********. Yes, I do see the reason we need codes, but to say that all of them are completely necessary, and NONE of them have been arbitrarily added by somebody with big pockets is preposterous. That is simply not how the American rule system works.
********! Complete and total ********. Yes, I do see the reason we need codes, but to say that all of them are completely necessary, and NONE of them have been arbitrarily added by somebody with big pockets is preposterous. That is simply not how the American rule system works.
This is kind of my point, and you aint helping. Now we can find something there is some debate on the it feeds the argument the whole code is out to do nothing but get some bum cant do it right. The debate about arc fault is old, this is nothing new but it essentially means you agree with everything the dummy says here about code.
I can go one step farther and make it a stretch but licensing may be even more of an issue and outright scam than the code is. Have to have one licensed professional to take any action against another.
Its pretty much a ticket to sell the most for the least to the edge of a lie. We see some of this jumping to conclusion when someone has got a price for a trouble shooting, the transformer relay thread comes to mind.
The guy has already showed up for a mess for free but there will be some smuck on the internet insist it should have been fixed for 50$ and the part was somewhere on some surplace for 19.95.