No way trying to liberate my great new state but I'm curious what loophole or interpretation of the code allows more than six meters for one structure to not have a main disconnect? The building I'm on has 25 throws of the hand
The building I'm on has 25 throws of the hand
Does those conduits run into a basement or under the slab?230.40 Ex No. 1 would be applicable if they didn't use meter mains... But then the rules for service entrance conductors would apply and they would have to run the conductors outside the building.
Except they haven't run service entrance conductors to each occupancy, they have run feeders because they used a meter main.230.71
Multiple-occupancy buildings may have service-entrance conductors run to each occupancy, and each such set of service-entrance conductors may have from one to six separate disconnects (see 230.40, Exception No. 1). Shown below is a single enclosure for grouping service equipment that consists of separate compartments for six circuit breakers or six fused switches.
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This arrangement does not require a single main service disconnecting means if they are in separate compartments
Because they are:Why do you think they are feeders?
Apparently you don't because there are no service entrance conductors feeding any of those occupancies. There are underground service conductors, bus bars, and then a feeder.None of the illustrations reference multi occupancy buildings.
I full well know the difference between a service, feeder, and branch circuit.
Because I don't feel like bus bars are conductors, they are part of the equipment. However, I can see the argument that they are as well. I think this is a gap that needs to be fixed for the purposes of that exception.Why would they not be?
The service to one dwelling, or the service to a building with multiple dwellings?I do not believe it is 6 throws to shut off the building, I always remember it as 6 throws to shut off the service.
Not if it meets 230.40 Ex No. 1. Then EACH OCCUOANCY can have UP TO 6 throws of the hand each.my thing is wouldnt the building itself require 6 throws or less to completely shut off building. View attachment 179384
Each Meter is considered a different service, so no limitation on number of individual meters and single associated shutoffs. Issue is there should be required placards identifying which meter/shutoff is associated with which unit. Usually the POCO and AHI would require the placards.
A single cold shutoff switch rated for 1200+ amps would be ridiculous expensive, and not required.
Each apartment/condo is a separate dwelling unit. I believe the line side power to the meter sockets (and sub-distribution) is covered by the NESC requirements, and not the NEC.
So as in having a six pack of meter/mains in a combo, each pack is counted as one service. Ingenious. So the total count of meters/mains do not count as long as they are grouped by six or less per lateral
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There is no nice way to tell you that you are wrong but you are. Larger openings can be protected with rolling doors supported by a sloping track which causes them to close by gravity once the hold open device is released. Fire doors are also available as an overhead roll down shutter assembly.I was being sarcastic. Many places rent out multiple units and then cut out doorways or large archways for fork trucks. A fire wall is a firewall. No doorways of any kind are allowed. Not even a fire rated door. A door can be propped open. As soon as a door is cut, the two buildings then become one building.
Not in New York State.There is no nice way to tell you that you are wrong but you are. Larger openings can be protected with rolling doors supported by a sloping track which causes them to close by gravity once the hold open device is released. Fire doors are also available as an overhead roll down shutter assembly.
Some of the door closure releasing mechanisms are simple fusible links.
View attachment 179638
Others are electrically released to close by the fire alarm system.
View attachment 179641
Automatic fire alarm controlled fire door release.
No modern factory would be insurable without the use of fire doors which allow fork lift trucks and other powered stock and machinery moving equipment through the fire walls that divide the structure into separate fire areas that can be protected with Standard Automatic Fire Sprinkler systems. Much smaller fire resistive door assemblies are available to protect conveyor and other stock moving openings.
View attachment 179639
Fire doors are available with ratings up to 4 hours and to fit any size opening.
View attachment 179640
For a sense of the size of this door and the opening it protects notice the "man door" built into the sliding door. Fire doors are available with a much dressier appearance for use in office and conference venues.
The San Francisco football team's stadium at candlestick park had an even larger fire door on it's seaward end. When the visiting team had to kick in that direction the stadium staff would open the door causing the usually strong wind off the sea to blow against them and assist the home teams kicker when kicking away from the seaward end. Once the teams traded ends at half time the door would be closed and the stiff breeze would no longer blow through. They were eventually caught at it of course so the commissioners made them stop the practice.
I took my Associate of Science in Fire Protection Technology at City College of San Francisco only a few miles away.
Tom Horne