International Association of Certified Home Inspectors
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| Electrical Inspections Contains discussions about electrical systems. This includes receptacles, panels, wiring, etc. |
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#1
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The electrician installed five 3-way switches next to the main panel to switch between the utility and a generator. I am used to seeing a generator transfer switch or a dedicated panel for the generator circuits. Are these switches rated for this type of duty? Is this OK?
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#2
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well a typical wall switch should be able to handle at least 15 amps which is roughly 1500 watts.
How much power are those generators drawing , and what kind of fuse or breakers. Is this commercial? |
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#3
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This is residential. It is my understanding that generator switches are designed to completely break contact with the first terminal before the making contact with the second terminal. This keeps the lineman from getting zapped (that and a little common sense). I am not sure a typical 3-way light switch works the same way.
I didn't see any fuses or breakers outside of the main panel. Most generators are fitted with breakers. Should there be additional breakers for the generator circuits? I did not see the generator. It was locked in a shed that I did not inspect. The only evidence of generator wiring was what you see in the photo. |
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#4
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Thats is why I would in this case ,defer to a certified electrician to inspect the generator system.
You had no access. This is something you may not run into alot of .but sounds worth studying now that you know it may come up. |
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#5
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Was it a auto start?
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#6
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Point wire to the circuit being served and the two travellers to the two separately derived power sources.... Hmmmmmm. I am guessing, but the only thing might be the fact that they are not all switched at once with one throw. Don't have the codebook with me, but now I have something to look up.... Kind of a kool application tho!
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#7
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Normally If a auto start it would control the panel Using switches inside the panel normally open , when the power goes off they close then they send a signal to the generator to start when the power comes back on it shuts the generator off ( this is all timed through a circuit panel similar to the big guys switch gear in large buildings. I wouldn't depend on light switches and that are manual controlled to many things can happen. Other option is with the portable generator is the breakers are tandem either generator or power (One throw ) so you can not send power to the lineman.
PS i hope you can follow this , it goes through my head but doesn't follow down to my fingers. lol |
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#8
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I don't know about you all but my agreement does not include generators and their switching devises so it would get deferred to a qualified electrician regardless whether it was accessible or not.
InterNachi Awards Portal: http://co.nachi.org/inachiawards/ ____________________________________________ "An Education, not just an Inspection" Larry Kage, CMI Lake Ann (Traverse City), Michigan 49650 231 929 3525 Professional Inspector serving the Traverse City, Michigan area and beyond.
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#9
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Quote:
Power company will not inspect the auto start here even |
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#10
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Same in my area - funny how their lineman are the ones at risk, yet they neither confirm or deny...
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#11
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This is a very dangerous set up. A critical thing regarding transferring circuits to a generator is that the neutrals have to change sources and also be isolated from the power company.
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#12
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Please Note:
Marc D. Shunk is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
Everything in this sentence is utter and complete nonsense, not to mention plainly incorrect. The neutral does not have to change sources. It may, but seldom does. When you switch the neutral also, you bring in a whole other set of complicated requirements, so it's almost never switched without good cause. From what I can see so far, there is nothing dangerous pictured.
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#13
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Please Note:
Michael Thellend is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
Quote:
Like all electrical equipment they all have their purpose and a transfer switch is the proper device to use, or a power relay to transfer at best, in an emergency backup system. Did he install a relay control box somewhere? Using a switch to control a relay or a contactor would be ok. This would not pass an electrical inspection if just switches are used to transfer I'm sure. If your house goes up in flames as a result of this setup your insurance company probably won't cover either. Mike Last edited by Michael Thellend; 2/10/09 at 11:21 PM.. |
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#14
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Please Note:
Michael Thellend is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
Quote:
If you don't break the neutral a potential can occur at the pole or a potential can hit your emergency backup system and damage it. Picture maybe a lineman shorting out the lines to your house accidentally during a repair. Will there not be current back feeding into the neutral to your power system? What if the generator shorted out or you had a leakage from a breakdown in insulation and or you had a defective breaker that didn't trip, would it not send current out to the lineman working on your mains? Many accidents happened during the great ice storms we had where generators blew up as a result of improper isolation and bonding methods. When hydro utility power resumed of course people had generators wired directly onto the mains or through a breaker and forgot to turn the main breaker off but the other reason was accidents. In order to have a safe system one must break all three conductors in an emergency backup system. This will ensure that at no time will there be an accident. The generator emergency sub panel should only see the generator neutral when in use and the same goes for hydro utility power. His emergency circuits are on the load side of the switches. The generator lines and main distribution breaker lines are feeding the travelers of the three ways. Mike Last edited by Michael Thellend; 2/11/09 at 7:42 AM.. |
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#15
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Honestly I can't see the images real well so I wont comment on them. I would defer to an electrician to look at them up close if you have a concern. As for the comments about the switched grounded conductor.....( if I may ) in nearly 99% of all applications with a generator we have a transfer switch that does not switch or disconnect the grounded conductor.....please read the definition of a SDS in the National Electrical Code and understand that while some transfers switches will switch the grounded conductor ( a true SDS ) some transfer switches do not and they are no more dangerous.
So unless I am missing something because I ( to be honest ) dont really want to read all the text......I will say this I have been teaching seminars for many years now and I can promise you not all generators switch the grounded conductors at the transfer switch.....So while we can throw reason into the MIX...the National Electrical Code does not mandate the switching of the grounded conductor in it's application. Now lets not try to mingle NEC 700, 701, 702 and 705 into the basic understanding of what constitutes a seperatly derived system as Marc is speaking of. If the tranfer switch is 3 pole with a common neutral ( grounded ) termination then it is not considered an SDS....if it is a 4 pole transfer switch with a switched neutral ( grounded ) conductor then it is a SDS...... Separately Derived System. A premises wiring system
whose power is derived from a source of electric energy or equipment other than a service. Such systems have no direct electrical connection, including a solidly connected grounded circuit conductor, to supply conductors originating in another system. Thus....again 99% of all the transfer switches I see ( and I see alot as a Munucipal Inspector ) do not meet the requirements to be considered a SDS.....this they must be wired accordingly and the equipment grounds, grounded conductors and so on must be sized accordingly. Are you saying all the manufactures are wrong and the UL listing on the transfer switches is a massive error in listing.....I think you understand what I am saying, we are not speaking theory here but how it is written as a minimum standard. Minimum National Electrical Code Standard...not Canadian Standard as I would not have a clue on theirs. Paul W. Abernathy Last edited by pabernathy; 2/16/09 at 6:35 PM.. |
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