Technical Vocabulary
Accessible -
(As applied to wiring methods) Capable of being removed or exposed without
damaging the building structure or finish, or not permanently closed in by the
structure or finish of the building.
Accessible -
(as applied to equipment) Admitting close approach: not guarded by locked
doors, elevation, or other effective means. (see Accessible, Readily)
Accessible,
Readily - (Readily Accessible) Capable of being reached quickly
for operation, renewal, or inspections, without requiring those to whom ready
access is requisite to climb over or remove obstacles or to resort to portable
ladders,chairs,etc.
Ambient
Temperature - The temperature of the air, water, or surrounding
earth. Conductor ampacity is corrected for changes in ambient temperature
including temperatures below 86°F. The cooling effect can increase the current
carrying capacity of the conductor. (Review Section 310-10 of the Electrical
Code for more understanding)
Ammeter -
An electric meter used to measure current, calibrated in amperes.
Ampacity -
The current-carrying capacity of conductors or equipment, expressed in amperes.
Ampere -
The basic SI unit measuring the quantity of electricity.
Bonding
Jumper - A bare or insulated conductor used to ensure the
required electrical conductivity between metal parts required to be
electrically connected. Frequently used from a bonding bushing to the service
equipment enclosure to provide a path around concentric knockouts in an
enclosure wall: also used to bond one raceway to another.
Continuity -
The state of being whole, unbroken.
Continuos
Load - A load where the maximum current is
expected to continue for three hours or more. Rating of the branch circuit
protection device shall not be less tan 125% of the continuos load.
Demand
Factor - For an electrical system or feeder circuit, this is a
ratio of the amount of connected load (in kva or amperes) that will be
operating at the same time to the total amount of connected load on the
circuit. An 80% demand factor, for instance, indicates that only 80% of the
connected load on a circuit will ever be operating at the same time. Conductor
capacity can be based on that amount of load.
Dustproof -
Constructed or protected so that dust will not interfere with its successful
operation.
Dusttight -
Constructed so that dust will not enter the enclosing case under specified test
conditions.
Duty,
continuos - A service requirement that demands operation at a
substantially constant load for an indefinitely long time.
Duty,
intermittent - A service
requirement that demands operation for alternate intervals of load and no load,
load and rest, or load, no load, and rest.
Duty,
periodic - A type of intermittent duty in which the load
conditions regularly reoccur.
Duty,
short time - A requirement of service that demands operations at a
substantially constant load for a short and definitely specified time.
Duty,
varying - A requirement of of service that demands operation at
loads, and for intervals of time, both of which may be subject to wide variation.
Explosionproof -
Designed and constructed to withstand and internal explosion without creating
an external explosion or fire.
Feeder -
A circuit, such as conductors in conduit or a busway run, which carries a large
block of power from the service equipment to a sub-feeder panel or a branch
circuit panel or to some point at which the block power is broken into smaller
circuits.
Ground -
A large conducting body (as the earth) used as a common return for an electric
circuit and as an arbitrary zero of potential.
Grounded,
effectively - Intentionally connected to earth through a ground
connection or connections of sufficiently low impedance and
having
sufficient current-carrying capacity to prevent the buildup of voltages that
may result in undue hazards to connect equipment or to persons.
Grounded
Conductor - A system or circuit conductor that is intentionally
grounded, usually gray or white in color.
Grounding
Conductor - A conductor used to connect metal equipment enclosures
and/or the system grounded conductor to a grounding electrode, such as the
ground wire run to the water pipe at a service; also may be a bare or insulated
conductor used to ground motor frames, panel boxes, and other metal equipment
enclosures used throughout electrical systems. In most conduit systems, the
conduit is used as the ground conductor.
Grounding
Equipment Conductor - The
conductor used to connect the noncurrent-carrying metal parts of equipment,
raceways, and other enclosures to the system grounded conductor, the grounding
electrode conductor, or both, of the circuit at the service equipment or at the
source of a separately derived system.
Grounding
Electrode - The conductor used to connect the grounding electrode
to the equipment grounding conductor, to the grounded conductor, or to both, of
the circuit at the service equipment or at the source of a separately derived
system.
Ground
Fault Circuit Interrupter - A device intended for the protection of personal that
functions to de-energize a circuit or portion thereof within an established
period of time when a current to ground exceeds some predetermined value that
is less than required to operate the overcurrent protection device of the
supply circuit.
Ground
Fault Protection of Equipment - A
system intended to provide protection of equipment from damaging line to ground
fault currents by operating to cause a disconnecting means to open all
ungrounded conductors of the faulted circuit. This protection is provided at
current levels less than those required to protect conductors from damage
through the operations of a supply circuit overcurrent device.
In
Sight From - (within sight from, within sight) Where this Code specifies that one equipment shall
be "in sight from", "within sight from" or m"within
sight", etc. of another equipment, the specified equipment is to be
visible and not more that 50´ distant from the other
Interrupter
Rating - The highest current at rated voltage that a device is
intended to interrupt under standard test conditions.
Labeled -
Items to which a label, trademark, or other identifying mark of nationally
recognized testing labs has been attached to indentify the items as having been
tested and meeting appropriate standards.
Listed -
Equipment or materials included in a list published by an organization
acceptable to the authority having jurisdiction and concerned with product
evaluation, that maintains periodic inspection of production of listed
equipment or materials, and whose listing states either that the equipment or
material meets appropriate designated standards or has been tested and found
suitable for use in specified manner.
Location,
damp - A location subject to moderate amount of moisture such
as some basements, barns, cold storage, warehouse and the like.
Location,
dry - A location not normally subject to dampness or wetness:
a location classified as dry may be temporarily subject to dampness or wetness,
as in case of a building under construction.
Location,
wet - A location subject to saturation with water or other
liquids.
Megger -
A test instrument for measuring the insulation resistance of conductors and
other electrical equipment; specifically, a mega ohm (million ohms) meter; this
is a registered trade mark of the James Biddle Co.
Mega
ohm - A unit of electrical resistance equal to one million
ohms.
Mega
ohmmeter - An instrument for measuring extremely high resistance.
No
inductive Circuit - A
circuit in which the magnetic effect of the current flowing has been reduced by
one several methods to a minimum or to zero.
Nonlinear
Load - A load where the wave shape of the steady state current
does not follow the wave shape of the applied voltage.
Ohm - The
derived SI unit for electrical resistance or impedance; one ohm equals one volt
per am-pere.
Ohmmeter -
an instrument for measuring resistance in ohms. Take a look at this diagram to
see how an ohmeter is used to check a small control transformer. The ohmmeter's
pointer deflection is controlled by the amount of battery current passing
through the moving coil. Before measuring the resistance of an unknown resistor
or electrical circuit, the ohmmeter must first be calibrated. If the value of
resistance to be measured can be estimated within reasonable limits, a range
selected that will give approximately half-scale deflection when the resistance
is inserted between the probes. If the resistance is unknown, the selector
switch is set on the highest scale. Whatever range is selected, the meter must
be calibrated to read zero before the unknown resistance is measured.
Over
current - Any current in excess of the rated current of equipment
or the capacity of a conductor. It may result from overload, short circuit or
ground fault.
Overload -
Load greater than the load for which the system or mechanism was intended. A
fault, such as a short circuit or ground fault, is not an overload.
Panel
board - A single panel or group of panel units designed for
assembly in the form of a single panel: includes buses and may come with or
without switches and/or automatic over current protective devices for the
control of light, heat, or power circuits of individual as well as aggregate
capacity. It is designed to be placed in a cabinet or cutout box that is in or
against a wall or partition and is accessible only from the front.
Plenum -
Chamber or space forming a part of an air conditioning system
Rainproof -
So constructed, projected, or treated as to prevent rain from interfering with
the successful operation of the apparatus under specified test conditions.
Rain
tight - So constructed or protected that exposure to a beating
rain will not result in the entrance of water.
Separately
Derived System - A
premises wiring system whose power is derived from a battery, a solar
photovoltaic system, or from a generator, transformer, or converter windings,
and that has no direct electrical connection, including solidly connected
grounded circuit conductor, to supply conductors originating in another system.
Service
Drop - Run of cables from the power company's aerial power
lines to the point of connection to a customer's premises.
Service
Conductors - The supply conductors that extend from the street main
or transformers to the service equipment of the premises being supplied
Service
Entrance Conductors -
(Overhead) The service conductors between the terminals of the service
equipment and a point usually outside the building, clear of building walls,
where joined by tap or splice to the service drop.
Service
Entrance Conductors -
(Underground) The service conductors between the terminals of the service
equipment and the point of connection to the service lateral.
Service
Equipment - The necessary equipment, usually consisting of a
circuit breaker or switch and fuses and their accessories, located near the point
entrance of supply conductors to a building and intended to constitute the main
control and cutoff means for the supply to the building. Service Lateral- The
underground service conductors between the street main, including any risers at
a pole or other structure or from transformers, and the first point of
connection to the service-entrance conductors in a terminal box, meter, or
other enclosure with adequate space, inside or outside the building wall. Where
there is no terminal box, meter, or other enclosure with adequate space, the
point of connection is the entrance point of the service conductors into the
building.
Service
Point - The point of connection between the facilities of the
serving utility and the premises wiring.
Switchboard -
A large single panel, frame, or assembly of panels having switches, over
current, and other protective devices, buses, and usually instruments mounted
on the face or back or both. Switchboards are generally accessible from the
rear and from the front and are not intended to be installed in cabinets.
Switch,
general use - A switch intended for use in general distribution and
branch circuits. It is rated in amperes and is capable of interrupting its
rated voltage.
Switch,
general-use snap - A
type of general-use switch so constructed that it can be installed in flush
device boxes or on outlet covers, or otherwise used in conjunction with wiring
systems recognized by the National Electric Code.
Switch,
isolating - A switch intended for isolating an electrical circuit
from the source of power. It has no interrupting rating and is intended to be
operated only after the circuit has been opened by some other means.
Switch,
knife - A switch in which the circuit is closed by a moving
blade engaging contact clips.
Switch,
motor-circuit - A
switch, rated in horsepower, capable of interrupting the maximum operating
overload current of a motor of the same horsepower rating as the switch at the
rated voltage.
Switch,
transfer - A transfer switch is an automatic or nonautomatic
device for transferring one or more load conductor connections from one power
source to another.
Switch-Leg -
That part of a circuit run from a lighting outlet box where a luminaries or
lamp holder is installed down to an outlet box that contains the wall switch
that turns the light or other load on or off: it is a control leg of the branch
circuit. Voltage Drop - The loss of voltage between the
input to a device and the output from a device due to the internal impedance or
resistance of the device. In all electrical systems, the conductors should be
sized so that the voltage drop never exceeds 3% for power, heating, and
lighting loads or combinations of these. Furthermore, the maximum total voltage
drop for conductors for feeders and branch circuits combined should never
exceed 5%.
Watertight -
So constructed that water/moisture will not enter the enclosure under specified
test conditions.
Weatherproof -
So constructed or protected that exposure to the weather will not interfere
with successful operation.
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