BX as a ground.

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mbrooke

Batteries Included
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United States
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Technician
Soon we'll not change a light bulb w/o afci's ......~RJ~



Well of course! What is wrong with that? Did you know, if a hot wire touches the ground wire and the breaker does not trip within 8 half cycles the home will burn down? AFCIs will prevent over 30,000 home fires every year. In fact the CPSC, NFPA, ESFI, Eaton, Schneider, GE, Siemens, NRTLs, and a slew of other agencies all say the this exact same thing. Why put a price on life? For as little as $250 per home thousands of lives will be sparred every year. I work for codes and standards and I know this is true because my superiors told me. You just see the money because you don't understand these devices save lives and its been proven in labs over and over. You are only bashing because you are an electrician who doesn't understand electrical theory, while I as a member of codes & standards do 100%. So please listen to me and me only while I disregard everything you say since you are well beneath me. I will be back, I have a ($$$) meeting to attend with full luncheon.























:p:p:p:p:p:p:p (kidding folks, I dont work for codes & standards)
 

al hildenbrand

Senior Member
Location
Minnesota
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Electrical Contractor, Electrical Consultant, Electrical Engineer
Again Al you are entitled to your opinion but many of us do not agree with it and that does not mean we are misquoting anything.

Just as you are entitled to your opinion we are entitled to ours.
As I have said, I'm offering Code. I have also said I am not an expert. I have been learning a lot in the course of this thread. I have been put in mind of Charlie's Rule and been buoyed by the experience in the area I work in.

I went back to the Old Codes and found that my wordsmithing fussiness has created a very real confusion in this thread. Where I have written, in previous posts, "non bonding strip Armored Cable type BX" or something to that effect, I have failed to apply Charlie's Rule.

"BX" was a trade name. "BX" was not the "type" of Armored Cable. Armored Cable installed BEFORE 1959 was type AC.

I followed my Codes back from 1959 for more than Twenty Years ( 20 ) to the 1937 NEC. You can read it yourself. In 1937, there were only two types of Armored Cable - type AC, and type ACL.

2014 NEC 250.118(8) . . .

1937%20NEC%20Armored%20Cable_02_zpsjbn6gs4i.jpg

1937%20NEC%20Armored%20Cable_01_zpswnyetap6.jpg
 

mbrooke

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United States
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Technician
So, this thread has inspired me to put the physics aside and view it from purely a code perspective. I must ask, the older NECs, is BX mentioned anywhere as an EGC?
 

al hildenbrand

Senior Member
Location
Minnesota
Occupation
Electrical Contractor, Electrical Consultant, Electrical Engineer
So, this thread has inspired me to put the physics aside and view it from purely a code perspective. I must ask, the older NECs, is BX mentioned anywhere as an EGC?
The term "EGC" or Grounding Conductor, Equipment was first in Article 100 Definitions in the 1968 NEC. It was split out of the earlier Article 100 Definitions term "Grounding Conductor".
 

al hildenbrand

Senior Member
Location
Minnesota
Occupation
Electrical Contractor, Electrical Consultant, Electrical Engineer
So, this thread has inspired me to put the physics aside and view it from purely a code perspective. I must ask, the older NECs, is BX mentioned anywhere as an EGC?

Also, to work towards better clarity, "BX" isn't mentioned at all in the NEC. Only Armored Cable type AC.
 

wwhitney

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Location
Berkeley, CA
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Retired
Umm, part III of article 320 in the (2011) NEC is titled "Construction Specifications". All of sections 320.100, 320.104, 320.108, and 320.120 are construction specifications.

Also, 320.108 references 240.4(A)(5) and 240.4(B)(4). Are you claiming that ex-AC cable actually meets those requirements?

Cheers, Wayne
 

wwhitney

Senior Member
Location
Berkeley, CA
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2011 NEC said:
250.118(8) Armor of Type AC cable as provided in 320.108.
That tells me that if it is type AC cable, and its armor meets the provisions of 320.108, then it is an EGC.

Ex-AC cable fails on both counts, as (a) it's not AC cable and (b) its armor does not meet the construction specification of 320.108.

Cheers, Wayne
 

al hildenbrand

Senior Member
Location
Minnesota
Occupation
Electrical Contractor, Electrical Consultant, Electrical Engineer
In 1918 the section on Armored Cable also shows no "BX" and, in fact, shows Armored Cable is type AC.

That's more than Forty years ( 40 ) before 1959.

1918%20NEC%20Armored%20Cable_02_zpsxnnwku3k.jpg

1918%20NEC%20Armored%20Cable_01_zpsg6vmyxfk.jpg
 

wwhitney

Senior Member
Location
Berkeley, CA
Occupation
Retired
So the NEC is never allowed to change its definitions?

I'm glad you see now that 250.118(8) doesn't apply to ex-AC cable.

Cheers, Wayne
 
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