Temporary Source of Power for Maintenance or Repair of the Alternate Source of Power in Oregon.

In Oregon, if the building owner deems it necessary and the emergency system relies on a single alternate source of power, which will be disabled for maintenance or repair, the emergency system shall include permanent switching means to connect a portable or temporary alternate source of power, which shall be available for the duration of the maintenance or repair.
Click to Enlarge
In Oregon, if the building owner deems it necessary and the emergency system relies on a single alternate source of power, which will be disabled for maintenance or repair, the emergency system shall include permanent switching means to connect a portable or temporary alternate source of power, which shall be available for the duration of the maintenance or repair.

The NEC® is an installation code, not a performance code, this concept has been made clear throughout the NEC®. However, when life safety is involved, sometimes the rules are bent a little.

Section 700.3 requires testing and routine maintenance of the emergency system which goes far beyond the initial installation. Section 700.12(F) requires batteries in emergency lighting and exit signs to maintain power for 90 minutes so that the building occupants can get out safely. Section 700.16 requires emergency lighting to be arranged so that the failure of one lamp doesn’t leave in total darkness, any area requiring emergency illumination.

Section 700.3(F) requires a way to ensure emergency systems remain operational when the main emergency source (such as an emergency generator) is taken offline for service or maintenance.

Sometimes an emergency generator needs more than just an oil change. Often, major repairs might be needed which warrant the need to disable the generator for an extended period of time. This code requirement ensures that during these times, the building occupants are still provided with a working emergency system and emergency illumination where required.

Below is the amended code language in Oregon pertaining to NEC® 700.3(F).

NEC 700.3(F) Temporary Source of Power for Maintenance or Repair of the Alternate Source of Power. If the building owner deems it necessary and the emergency system relies on a single alternate source of power, which will be disabled for maintenance or repair, the emergency system shall include permanent switching means to connect a portable or temporary alternate source of power, which shall be available for the duration of the maintenance or repair. The permanent switching means to connect a portable or temporary alternate source of power shall comply with the following:

(1) Connection to the portable or temporary alternate source of power shall not require modification of the permanent system wiring.

(2) Transfer of power between the normal power source and the emergency power source shall be in accordance with 700.12.

(3) The connection point for the portable or temporary alternate source shall be marked with the phase rotation and system bonding requirements.

(4) Mechanical or electrical interlocking shall prevent inadvertent interconnection of power sources.

(5) The switching means shall include a contact point that shall annunciate at a location remote from the generator or at another facility monitoring system to indicate that the permanent emergency source is disconnected from the emergency system.

Did You Like This? Let Us Know With A Like! Thanks!

Temporary Source of Power for Maintenance or Repair of the Alternate Source of Power in Oregon.

Below is a Real Question from our Electrical Continuing Education Courses for Electrical License Renewal:

Assuming the Oregon building owner deems it necessary, which emergency system is required to include permanent switching means to connect a portable or temporary alternate source of power?

A: All emergency systems supplied by gas generators.
B: All emergency systems supplied by a single fuel source.
C: An emergency system that relies on a single alternate source of power.
D: An emergency system that relies on multiple alternate sources of power.
Please register or sign in for electrical continuing education courses.

If you were already signed in, your session probably expired, please sign back in.