the trend here, not sure if it's code ... but smoke detectors on a well used circuit, so it cannot be inadvertently tripped without knowing or intentionally tripped to silence nuisance alarms
If the breaker gets tripped, the damned things start chirping to let you know the power is out. It's the same annoying chirp that tells you a battery is dead/dying.the trend here, not sure if it's code ... but smoke detectors on a well used circuit, so it cannot be inadvertently tripped without knowing or intentionally tripped to silence nuisance alarms
I started shacking houses around 92 not long after I got out of the Army.For all I know, we might have been on the 84 code when I did it. Maybe there was an amendment letting it happen?
It's a 200' walk for you to reset a tripped breaker?Never quite understood the accessibility rule. My breaker panel is outside the house a good couple hundred feet away...
It's a 200' walk for you to reset a tripped breaker?
There are a lot of houses where a 200' walk could be involved with getting to the panel. In the grand scheme of things, 200' isn't very far. With the comment about accessibility included, you make is sound as if you are going outside and walking to the neighbors house. I'm not going to measure, but I would bet it's more than a 200' walk to get to my panel from the master bedroom. The panel is in the basement, under the master. Out of the bedroom, across the house, down the hallway to the stairs, down the stairs, through another hallway and back to the other side of the house.Some locations to a breaker would defiantly entail more than 200'.
I'm not familiar with the code for this... but is their 200' number a "as the crow flies" sort of deal?
There are a lot of houses where a 200' walk could be involved with getting to the panel. In the grand scheme of things, 200' isn't very far. With the comment about accessibility included, you make is sound as if you are going outside and walking to the neighbors house. I'm not going to measure, but I would bet it's more than a 200' walk to get to my panel from the master bedroom. The panel is in the basement, under the master. Out of the bedroom, across the house, down the hallway to the stairs, down the stairs, through another hallway and back to the other side of the house.
Accessible just means you can get to it without tearing anything up.
Article 100.
Accessible (as applied to equipment). Capable of being reached for operation, renewal, and inspection.
Accessible (as applied to wiring methods). Capable of being removed or exposed without damaging the building structure or finish or not permanently closed in by the structure or finish of the building.
Accessible, Readily (Readily Accessible). Capable of being reached quickly for operation, renewal, or inspections without requiring those to whom ready access is requisite to take actions such as to use tools (other than keys), to climb over or under, to remove obstacles, or to resort to portable ladders, and so forth.
I don't understand the reasoning behind outdoor panels. Never have, never will. Your first post says outside a couple hundred feet away. It sounds like it's a couple hundred feet away from the house.Yeah I guess the fact that I have to go outside and walk 75' is where I get upset.
If there was an electrical emergency inside the house I can run around naked, barefoot, etc. to the panel and not have to worry about running into pitch black nighttime hoping I don't stepping on sharp rocks, rattlesnakes, cholla, prickly pear, and then finding the key or breaking the lock off on the exterior panel to switch a breaker off.
I don't understand the reasoning behind outdoor panels. Never have, never will. Your first post says outside a couple hundred feet away. It sounds like it's a couple hundred feet away from the house.
Anyone know the code violation on that? Lots of homes I've seen have sub-panels in a closet. We've got a sub-panel in the laundry room.One is that I put a subpanel in a large closet and he told me it can't be in a closet.
Yea, that's a thing.Also, failed me because apparently we need to have three wired smoke detectors in the addition all joined together so if one goes off, all go off.
240.24(D)Anyone know the code violation on that? Lots of homes I've seen have sub-panels in a closet. We've got a sub-panel in the laundry room.
Well... I will mention it... In addition to wired smoke detectors... they require at least ONE carbon monoxide detector "Combo" as well. One smoke detector in EACH bedroom, one near the kitchen and the Carbon Monoxide detector combo on the ceiling in a main hallway. Usually at the top of the stairs if you have stairs... if not... somewhere in the central hallway.
Good point on the carbon, but the only locations that should be required should be likited to the addition. I don't know what the addition consists of, but if they want three, I'd guess it's two bedrooms and a hallway. If so, the carbon would go in the hall.
Welp, as soon as he passes us on the final, that bad boy is getting flipped back to the closet again. If not, it'll be in my son's (4) room and the only thing it powers is his room and his sisters (7) room. They are the greatest friends and most bitter of enemies. He'd pop that door and start hitting switches anytime she wronged him.240.24(D)
I just googled it. It appears that 1981 was the first year that mentioned clothes closets. There was either an amendment excepting it or the inspector didn't know about it when I did two of them in 1997.
For those that don't want to look it up:240.24(D)
I just googled it. It appears that 1981 was the first year that mentioned clothes closets. There was either an amendment excepting it or the inspector didn't know about it when I did two of them in 1997.
240.24(D) Not in Vicinity of Easily Ignitible Material. Overcurrent devices shall not be located in the vicinity of easily ignitible material, such as in clothes closets.
I wouldn't be willing to argue and I'm a ***** that likes to argue.The question is if you can address the "vicinity" issue, IE per Table 110.26A 1 and 30" width of working space, would that be "passable"?
Nest Protects connect wirelessly using a Nest-developed protocol called Weave that lets Nest Protects communicate with one another safely and securely without an active Wi-Fi connection.
Weave uses 802.15.4 and Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n to create reliable, flexible, secure and low-power communication between Protects.
You can think of the 802.11b/g/n protocol as the connection that communicates with the outside world and performs tasks like automatically updating Nest Protect software or allowing you to get mobile notifications on your phone. You can think of the 802.15.4 protocol as the low-power connection that lets Nest Protects communicate with each other.
This means your Protects can continue to talk to one another, and can let you know when smoke or carbon monoxide is detected in other parts of the home, even if your Wi-Fi network goes down.