NoFlex conduit lying on the copper pipe?
Electrical section question only so copper pipe to grid not applicable.@ = @
Copper piping in contact with the ceiling grid.....Also,
possible non-access to the electronic device.
@ = @
Not a suspended ceiling. It will have drywall.Electrical wires shall be independently supported, not by the the suspended ceiling. NEC300.11(A)(1&2)
Wait a minute. In another thread you discussed how they could reach up through the fixture hole and replace the electronics. Why doesn’t that apply here?Electrical section question only so copper pipe to grid not applicable.
Possible non-access to the device is the correct answer! yay
Because you must be able to change the driver which is fixed in place. It is considered a junction box.Wait a minute. In another thread you discussed how they could reach up through the fixture hole and replace the electronics. Why doesn’t that apply here?
I’m dense. Why can’t you pull the fixture, reach up through the hole, open the face of that box (looks like it is hinged), and change the driver?Because you must be able to change the driver which is fixed in place. It is considered a junction box.
You said this in the thread “cite the code please”.I’m dense. Why can’t you pull the fixture, reach up through the hole, open the face of that box (looks like it is hinged), and change the driver?
Aren't we talking about puck lights here? I thought those were all surface mounted, other than the small hole for the conductor. If so - no way to access the j-box.You said this in the thread “cite the code please”.
They are often a 3" hole and accessible because there must be enough slack to pull the box out of the hole. This is one of the things I check at rough and then final when I have them show me they can pull some of the LED drivers out after they remove the pucks.
Yes and yesAren't we talking about puck lights here? I thought those were all surface mounted, other than the small hole for the conductor. If so - no way to access the j-box.