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Steve wrote in :
You are kidding right? If not, what specific code are you referring to? I think my insurance says you need a electrician to certify it. Unless you are in some third world country, your country will have an ELECTRICAL CODE, like the NEC (National Electric Code) in the USA. All electrical components must be NEC components. Your question was about something home-made. If it ever caused a fire and were "Not To Code", the insurance company would simply disallow the claim. An example happened to a country church I used to fix the Hammond organ for.... Instead of buying proper in-floor 115VAC recepticals, those round brass floor outlets you see in a mall store all over which have flip-top covers or screw covers to protect the sunken outlets noone can step on and break, the church decided to save a few bucks by installing wall outlets in the stage floor on either side of the pulpit and putting a metal outlet cover, no protection at all, on them. This is NOT to CODE. They are WALL outlets. Well, someone stepped on one and cracked open the plastic outlet, but it didn't immediately arc and catch the wooden stage on fire. That happened some time between Sunday night service and Wednesday prayer service. Being isolated way out in the country, noone saw it go up in flames. The insurance company found out about the Not to Code wiring and disallowed the claim for the fire. Don't blame me....ask your insurance guy if you can put a home-made relay in your AC line and be insured by his underwriters..... |
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