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Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 853
L
Member
Hotline, I'm forever amazed at how one answer can raise so many questions.

Gregg, your point aswell, now, the only standard is for rated cables.

For the record, I will continue to install cable and phone.
Also fiber. I just need to learn how to terminate that. (all for a fee)Mandated or not.

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Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 5,445
Likes: 3
Cat Servant
Member
Leland, I appreciate you desire to serve your customer best. I, also, do many things that are not required by code ...

OR, at least, not according to some, who use 'code' as a design guide. That might mean a few more receptacles and switches ... but I try to make the place livable, and not something to sneak past the planning department.

Still, there's a world of difference, in my mind, between what's 'legal' and what's 'right.' I've seen plans where the phone / data were left off - and have always raised the issue.

I make the distinction ... and I cannot, in my greatest stretch of the imagination, include a phone jack as essential to the minimum needed for safety ... which is what Article 90 tells us is the purpose of the NEC.

Let's not confuse what's 'better' or 'nicer' with the bare minimum. That's where the code panel and I disagree.

Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 853
L
Member
We Shall follow the code. Our responsability as pros.
I will.
I also tend to provide a plan with my bids/ schemes, as If I were to live there. Then we knock it down from there.
If they want code min.. so be it.

I have never been involved in the code process, but have friends who are (State level), I am intending to get involved, as an observer for now, then see where it takes me. Untill then..I'll just complain smile

Joined: Oct 2000
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Broom Pusher and
Member
Referring to what Greg posted above:
Quote

I guess that is why some say it is so ambiguous that it is unenforceable. I could meet the letter of the law if I just punched a piece of bell wire through the garage wall into whatever room that was and strung it over to an external wall in the garage near the front side of the house. That would work for a POTS phone.


This is precisely why I say the NEC is _NOT_ a Design Manual!

Greg's example is compliant to the article (as far as what I have read in this thread).
It complies because:
  • An Outlet For Land-Line Communications -
  • Is Installed -
  • Someplace In The Dwelling -
  • Connected To The Demark -
  • Somehow -
  • With Some Type Of Cable / Wire.


Non-Design, because it _DOES NOT_:
  • Specify An Outlet Type -
  • Specify A Cable Type -
  • Specify How The Cable Is To Be Run -
  • Require Minimum Performance Specifications -
  • Require A POTS Subscription -
  • Direct An Installer To Place Outlet At Required Height Or Location.


I do agree with others, where the influences of Manufacturers has lobbied certain articles, but that's another issue completely.
Seeing the proposal initiated by a BICSI rep falls in this category!

I also agree that the article is kind of lame, as this is not a 100% safety issue, but I may be reading / interpreting the ROP and article quotes the wrong way!

Please excuse the passion against seeing the article as a design measure. I see way too many design parameters in my line of work, and all of these design items have nothing to do with any type of safety or building safety compliance!
They have to do with _PERFORMANCE_

It's up to me to design per the desired performance, and include any and all safety compliances related to a given project.

Results are one part design, one part code compliance (more like CODES - as the designs orient around more than what's NEC compliant!)

Scott


Scott " 35 " Thompson
Just Say NO To Green Eggs And Ham!
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