Electrician Talk banner
1 - 13 of 13 Posts

· Senior Member
Joined
·
801 Posts
Discussion Starter · #1 ·
NFPA has the following editions as PDF files costing $28.00 for nonmembers.

1947 Adopted by NBFU in January 1947 Approved by American Standards Association on 10/4/46 and designated as ASA C1-1946 With1949 supplementary revisions - SEE text of NBFU 1949 supplement to NBFU 70-1947
1951 Adopted by NFPA on 12/27/50 Approved by the American Standards Association on 3/21/51 and designated as ASA C1-1951 Text same as NBFU 70- 1951 Also published in Vol. V of the National Fire Codes 1951
1953 Adopted by NFPA in May 1953 Released by NFPA Board of Directors on 6/29/53 Approved as an American Standard on 8/7/53 and designated as ASA C1-1953
1956 Adopted by NFPA in June 1956 Approved as an American Standard on 9/4/56 and designated as ASA C1-1956 Text same as NBFU 70-1956
1958 Proposed Amendments to the 1956 Edition of the National Electrical Code
1959 Adopted by NFPA in June 1959 Approved as an American Standard on 8/5/59 and designated as ASA C1-1959 Text same as NBFU 70-1959
1962 Adopted by NFPA in May 1962 Adopted as an American Standard on 7/24/62 and designated as ASA C1-1962
1965 Adopted by NFPA in May 1965 Adopted by the American Standards Association on 7/6/65 and designated as ASA C1-1965
1968 Adopted by NFPA in May 1968 Approved by the American Standards Institute on 7/11/68 and designated as USAS C1-1968 See Appendix for TIAs 146 148
1971 Adopted by NFPA in May 1971 Approved by ANSI on 6/25/71 and designated as ANSI C1-1971
1975 Adopted by NFPA in May 1974 Approved by ANSI on 4/17/75 and designated as ANSI C1-1975
1978 Adopted by NFPA in May 1977 See NFPA 497M-1983 for continuation of extensive lists of gases vapors and dusts and their group classifications
1981 Adopted by NFPA in May 1980Released by the Standards Council on 6/19/80ANSI approvedTIA's 811 2 & 3 at end of booklet errata for first printing incorp. into text of second printing
1984 Adopted by NFPA on 5/19/83 Released by the Standards Council on 7/14/83 Approved by ANSI on 8/5/93 TIAs 70-84-1 & 70-84-2 at end of booklet TIA 70-84-1 is reissuance of TIA 70-81-10 NFPA 70-1981 TIA 70-84-2 is reissuance of TIA 70-81-11 NFPA 70-1981
1987 Adopted by NFPA on 5/21/86 Released by the Standards Council on 7/10/86 Approved by ANSI on 7/30/86
1990 Adopted by NFPA on 5/18/89 Released by the Standards Council on 7/14/89 Approved by ANSI on 8/7/89
 

· Registered
Joined
·
2 Posts
NFPA has the following editions as PDF files costing $28.00 for nonmembers.

1947 Adopted by NBFU in January 1947 Approved by American Standards Association on 10/4/46 and designated as ASA C1-1946 With1949 supplementary revisions - SEE text of NBFU 1949 supplement to NBFU 70-1947
1951 Adopted by NFPA on 12/27/50 Approved by the American Standards Association on 3/21/51 and designated as ASA C1-1951 Text same as NBFU 70- 1951 Also published in Vol. V of the National Fire Codes 1951
1953 Adopted by NFPA in May 1953 Released by NFPA Board of Directors on 6/29/53 Approved as an American Standard on 8/7/53 and designated as ASA C1-1953
1956 Adopted by NFPA in June 1956 Approved as an American Standard on 9/4/56 and designated as ASA C1-1956 Text same as NBFU 70-1956
1958 Proposed Amendments to the 1956 Edition of the National Electrical Code
1959 Adopted by NFPA in June 1959 Approved as an American Standard on 8/5/59 and designated as ASA C1-1959 Text same as NBFU 70-1959
1962 Adopted by NFPA in May 1962 Adopted as an American Standard on 7/24/62 and designated as ASA C1-1962
1965 Adopted by NFPA in May 1965 Adopted by the American Standards Association on 7/6/65 and designated as ASA C1-1965
1968 Adopted by NFPA in May 1968 Approved by the American Standards Institute on 7/11/68 and designated as USAS C1-1968 See Appendix for TIAs 146 148
1971 Adopted by NFPA in May 1971 Approved by ANSI on 6/25/71 and designated as ANSI C1-1971
1975 Adopted by NFPA in May 1974 Approved by ANSI on 4/17/75 and designated as ANSI C1-1975
1978 Adopted by NFPA in May 1977 See NFPA 497M-1983 for continuation of extensive lists of gases vapors and dusts and their group classifications
1981 Adopted by NFPA in May 1980Released by the Standards Council on 6/19/80ANSI approvedTIA's 811 2 & 3 at end of booklet errata for first printing incorp. into text of second printing
1984 Adopted by NFPA on 5/19/83 Released by the Standards Council on 7/14/83 Approved by ANSI on 8/5/93 TIAs 70-84-1 & 70-84-2 at end of booklet TIA 70-84-1 is reissuance of TIA 70-81-10 NFPA 70-1981 TIA 70-84-2 is reissuance of TIA 70-81-11 NFPA 70-1981
1987 Adopted by NFPA on 5/21/86 Released by the Standards Council on 7/10/86 Approved by ANSI on 7/30/86
1990 Adopted by NFPA on 5/18/89 Released by the Standards Council on 7/14/89 Approved by ANSI on 8/7/89
@Joe Tedesco, do you know if this deal is still available and how to get it? They have the link now, but it seems to only go back to the 2011 Code. I do a lot of research and would love to have access to these records in order to trace the progression of the rules over the years.
 

· Registered
Joined
·
33,739 Posts
@Joe Tedesco, do you know if this deal is still available and how to get it? They have the link now, but it seems to only go back to the 2011 Code. I do a lot of research and would love to have access to these records in order to trace the progression of the rules over the years.
This post is 9 years old.
 

· Registered
Retired Electrician
Joined
·
428 Posts
The only real purpose of having a code book that is out of date, would be to determine if an installation was code-compliant in the past.
As soon as you get involved with rewiring old buildings, were only part of the existing wire plant can be accessed without destroying historical or community values, those old codes become very valuable. Some things that would never be allowed in any addition of the more recent editions of the US National Electric Code (NEC) can be left in place as long as the installation actually complied with that earlier code at the time the permit for construction of the building was issued. The real PITA is finding out were the records of the AHJ that existed at that time might be stored so that you can identify the correct addition. I won't pretend, even for a second, that I know any of the fine details but overheard conversations between engineers and code compliance inspectors told me that it can make a difference of several thousand dollars on the cost of the job.

I did the alarm and control stuff for 2 museum conversions of palatial robber baron era homes to museums. Those really were challenging to do while leaving history intact and still ending up with an essentially safe wiring system. On one of those jobs I got a 100 dollar bonus; back when that was serious money in my families budget; for suggesting the use of polycarbonate sheeting to leave the original knob and tube wiring intact in the never finished basement and yet avoid any significant likelihood of visitor contact with the wires. One of the big challenges was to get the Glaziers' union to agree that the mere fact that you could see through the polycarbonate did not make the installation of the contact shielding their work. How the 2 locals worked it out is way out of my depth; as in the bosun calling out "No bottom with this line."

Tom Horne
 
1 - 13 of 13 Posts
Top