Our Hubbell Outlets are not GFCI - we do have a fast acting Circuit Breaker in place - works well.
Our products are not currently UL or CSA (or CE)...
Next year we will apply for CE.
Thank You,
Mark
New dedicated line & outlets sound worse, not better- HELP!
Our Hubbell Outlets are not GFCI - we do have a fast acting Circuit Breaker in place - works well. At the receptacle/s is there a difference of potential, voltage, from either Hot contact to the "U" shaped safety equipment ground contact of 60Vac? If yes, I believe, that meets the definition of a separately derived 60/120Vac grounded Technical Power System. Jim |
@jea48 While I certainly do appreciate your question and your desire to learn more about our product I never want to take the position of "that's an internal issue"... I can share with you that we in fact do put our real Balanced Power and without writing a term paper here perhaps you might enjoy a 10 minute conversation with John Levreault our Lead Designer of this product. John has been around almost 50 years in this industry and is responsible for some of the best analog and digital designs around. I could surely ask him to phone you up and discuss our topology which is Balanced. My e-mail is corepowertech@outlook.com My ask is that if we do this - you then offer your report as such here. Good it would come from you and not from me. I could simply answer your question - but as you've asked... this might be a nice exercise... Best wishes, Mark |
This info may be of interest. It was printed in 2007 but it still holds true today. https://www.tdi.texas.gov/fire/documents/fmnec70papers.pdf NEC has moved pretty rapidly since 2002 in regards to electrical safety in residential occupancies. I had thought for 2017 NEC would require all 120V 15 and 20 amp branch circuits, that supply lighting and receptacle outlets, would require combination AFCI/GFCI protection in residential occupancies. From what I have read NEC did not. They did expand where AFCI protection is required.
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