I would go with unhooking the mill and hook up a table saw with UL listing.
Years ago, the surefire way to fail was to clean up the copper scrap before the
inspection (the scrap would disappear) and you got your green tag.I never knew
what happened to the scrap.
Scott
On Wednesday, July 28, 2021, 2:16:38 PM CDT, Ralph Stirling
<[email protected]> wrote:
I'm in a bind now. I just had the electrical wiring I put
into my garage shop inspected. The WA state inspector
liked my wiring fine, but balked at the non-UL-listed
CNC mill (the main point to my whole garage shop project).
He insists it get stamped by one of the *seven* official
"approved engineers" for the state of WA before he can
sign off on my electric. I suspect that the field approval
would cost considerably more than my entire mill (1998
vintage French 5hp spindle, 300x200x300mm travels,
$5K). Didn't matter to him that the new VFD is listed.
Any other US-based, especially WA-based LinuxCNC
retrofitters faced this problem successfully?
Thanks,
-- Ralph
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