wbcarter
Mechanical
- May 11, 2009
- 3
Hi,
I am getting conflicting information from people I've asked outside of this forum before discovering this forum so I hope someone here can answer this definitively.
We are designing a new kind of plastic wall light switch plate. It's simply a plastic cover wallplate like the one in all homes but with a new cosmetic design.
Some tell me the National Electrical Code in the USA requires that switch plates be certified by an NTRL like UL however I saw some on the market at large retailers like Home Depot that don't seem to be UL Listed and don't bear a UL mark.
One manufacturer told me cover plates are not required to be approved, only the actual devices (switches, receptacles) are.
UL requirements cover materials, flammability and electrical arc resistance.
I got a ridiculous quote from UL which ranged from $2K is using UL recognized plastics to as much as $30K if they have to retest the material used for RTI. I maybe using a special additive at 10% mixed with this plastic to create a pearl shine that may mean it is not completely UL recognized plastic but one with some additional additive that may change the properties a bit, probably not by much.
Does something as simple as a light switch plate need to be UL Listed in order to make and sell in USA and throughout North + South America?
I noticed some do not have it and are still accepted in large retailers like Home Depot.
Am I subject to liability if I do not have it or is this a bunch of hooey to scare me into paying for UL certification when I can get sued either way.
I thought the switch itself had to be UL listed and safe and if that was safe, there would be no chance of fire right?
The standard is UL514D and must be flame rated for UL94 V0 or UL94 V2.
Thanks for any insights. i want to know if I have to blow the money to UL or not in order to market a plastic light switch plate.
I am getting conflicting information from people I've asked outside of this forum before discovering this forum so I hope someone here can answer this definitively.
We are designing a new kind of plastic wall light switch plate. It's simply a plastic cover wallplate like the one in all homes but with a new cosmetic design.
Some tell me the National Electrical Code in the USA requires that switch plates be certified by an NTRL like UL however I saw some on the market at large retailers like Home Depot that don't seem to be UL Listed and don't bear a UL mark.
One manufacturer told me cover plates are not required to be approved, only the actual devices (switches, receptacles) are.
UL requirements cover materials, flammability and electrical arc resistance.
I got a ridiculous quote from UL which ranged from $2K is using UL recognized plastics to as much as $30K if they have to retest the material used for RTI. I maybe using a special additive at 10% mixed with this plastic to create a pearl shine that may mean it is not completely UL recognized plastic but one with some additional additive that may change the properties a bit, probably not by much.
Does something as simple as a light switch plate need to be UL Listed in order to make and sell in USA and throughout North + South America?
I noticed some do not have it and are still accepted in large retailers like Home Depot.
Am I subject to liability if I do not have it or is this a bunch of hooey to scare me into paying for UL certification when I can get sued either way.
I thought the switch itself had to be UL listed and safe and if that was safe, there would be no chance of fire right?
The standard is UL514D and must be flame rated for UL94 V0 or UL94 V2.
Thanks for any insights. i want to know if I have to blow the money to UL or not in order to market a plastic light switch plate.