City inspector failed house inspection: "no IEEC label inside electric panel" What is this ?

Status
Not open for further replies.

Stevenfyeager

Senior Member
Location
United States, Indiana
Occupation
electrical contractor
The inspector listed this as one item of failure: "No IEEC label in elec panel door." Her notes say "Indiana Energy Efficiency Code" I've never heard of this. Nor have had any inspector write this. I will call in the morning, but.....?
 

LarryFine

Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
Location
Henrico County, VA
Occupation
Electrical Contractor
Agreed. I wonder if it's a label the house has to "earn" and then be placed in the panel, like another inspection.
 

augie47

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Tennessee
Occupation
State Electrical Inspector (Retired)
some inspection agencies require documentation of conformance to non-electrical ordinances before applying power and that compliance is documented by stickers in the electrical panel. For instance, TN requires a mobile home achoring certification sticker on the panel before we can allow power. Guessing, but I imagine its a similar situation in your case.
Here tjhe electrical inspectprs become the "whipping boy" for anchoring, septic inspections, and even landscaping... non compliance = no power.
 

102 Inspector

Senior Member
Location
N/E Indiana
Occupation
Inspector- All facets
As an inspector in Indiana, some like to see the energy audit sticker which is typically affixed to the door of the service panel. It would not always be related to an electricians work. I have problem with energy code until the government starts paying my energy cost. I inspect to a prescriptive code and then discuss what a contractor has done performance based to pass code. I do the same with all trades and find that conversation solve most issues without a "failure" notice.
 

Stevenfyeager

Senior Member
Location
United States, Indiana
Occupation
electrical contractor
As an inspector in Indiana, some like to see the energy audit sticker which is typically affixed to the door of the service panel. It would not always be related to an electricians work. I have problem with energy code until the government starts paying my energy cost. I inspect to a prescriptive code and then discuss what a contractor has done performance based to pass code. I do the same with all trades and find that conversation solve most issues without a "failure" notice.
Thank you, it was an insulation rating label given by a subcontractor who puts a test on air infiltration, not related to our service panel at all. This inspector is kind of hard to reach for questions. The GC got his sub to come and test it today.
 

dkidd

Senior Member
Location
here
Occupation
PE
Thank you, it was an insulation rating label given by a subcontractor who puts a test on air infiltration, not related to our service panel at all. This inspector is kind of hard to reach for questions. The GC got his sub to come and test it today.
He meant IECC
 

Attachments

  • Pages from 0726S2-sample.jpg
    Pages from 0726S2-sample.jpg
    137 KB · Views: 19

keith gigabyte

Senior Member
I've heard of similar things like framing insp before rough wiring can be approved. Any other trade tied to getting a successful electrical inspection is crap. If the electrical trade does their job correctly and to NEC then pass it. You are costing the electrical contractor money...time spent figuring out what IECC or whatever else you call another trade inspection...then he has to spend time contacting other trade to clear things up...all the while thr customer may be holding payment until successful pass of electrical inspection..getting failed for reasons not connected to him.
 

LarryFine

Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
Location
Henrico County, VA
Occupation
Electrical Contractor
I've heard of similar things like framing insp before rough wiring can be approved. Any other trade tied to getting a successful electrical inspection is crap. If the electrical trade does their job correctly and to NEC then pass it. You are costing the electrical contractor money...time spent figuring out what IECC or whatever else you call another trade inspection...then he has to spend time contacting other trade to clear things up...all the while thr customer may be holding payment until successful pass of electrical inspection..getting failed for reasons not connected to him.
Methinks the concern is a framing correction damaging a wire. We usually want the plumbing and duct work done first, too.

After all, wiring is more flexible than pipe and duct, not to mention more fragile.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top