I dont want this to become a life safety or compliance thread, but...
Enzo is right here. Theres just no sure way to know what lurks below the cover plate of every outlet. I used to be an electrician, so I can offer a few insights on common code violations I saw routinely. Please excuse the fact I'm not citing NEC as I don't own a current one (or one on this coast!) or I would.
Reversed hot and neutral (the common and big one)
No or bogus grounds (literally fake bonds to boxes tied to 2 wire (old no gnd) romex)
Loose installations (cables free in walls, very common in retro, they get yanked when people are in the attic, etc)
Receptacles upside down! NEC says all receptacles with a metal plate SHALL be installed with the gnd pin up so when the plate screw falls out they don't short!
GFCI Controlled outlets with no tag (yah! the code says to label any outlet slaved onto a GFCI thats what they include all the stickers for!)
No line of sight disconnect on loads 1/4hp and above, residential- Yep, your disposal and dishwasher need to be on a switch or cord and plug!
So yah, the code is rigorous but that- as Dan Torres points out in his book- doesn't mean anything in america where the guy who wires the stage is working off his bar tab. He goes on to point out that very danger in working on equipment with a variac- that his had a spst in his case and the neutral was hot for whatever reason. Nathan, with all due respect, I'm not sure you make an argument against switching a neutral as much as for due diligence at the bench? I agree, and pull the power cord every time, in fact, I'm a huge fan of IEC plugs for this reason! (with that sweet fuse built in oooooo!)
Enzo is right here. Theres just no sure way to know what lurks below the cover plate of every outlet. I used to be an electrician, so I can offer a few insights on common code violations I saw routinely. Please excuse the fact I'm not citing NEC as I don't own a current one (or one on this coast!) or I would.
Reversed hot and neutral (the common and big one)
No or bogus grounds (literally fake bonds to boxes tied to 2 wire (old no gnd) romex)
Loose installations (cables free in walls, very common in retro, they get yanked when people are in the attic, etc)
Receptacles upside down! NEC says all receptacles with a metal plate SHALL be installed with the gnd pin up so when the plate screw falls out they don't short!
GFCI Controlled outlets with no tag (yah! the code says to label any outlet slaved onto a GFCI thats what they include all the stickers for!)
No line of sight disconnect on loads 1/4hp and above, residential- Yep, your disposal and dishwasher need to be on a switch or cord and plug!
So yah, the code is rigorous but that- as Dan Torres points out in his book- doesn't mean anything in america where the guy who wires the stage is working off his bar tab. He goes on to point out that very danger in working on equipment with a variac- that his had a spst in his case and the neutral was hot for whatever reason. Nathan, with all due respect, I'm not sure you make an argument against switching a neutral as much as for due diligence at the bench? I agree, and pull the power cord every time, in fact, I'm a huge fan of IEC plugs for this reason! (with that sweet fuse built in oooooo!)
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