C22.2 NO. 14-10
Industrial control equipment
Product Details
Preface
This is the eleventh edition of CSA C22.2 No. 14, Industrial control equipment, one of a series of Standards issued by the Canadian Standards Association under Part II of the Canadian Electrical Code. It supersedes the previous editions, published in 2005, 1995, 1991, 1987, 1985, 1973, 1966, 1953, 1942, and 1935.
This edition incorporates numerous revisions to the text, figures, and tables. These revisions have been incorporated to satisfy two key criteria. First, some are intended to expand on and clarify requirements where the previous text possibly allowed for some ambiguity. These revisions attempt to more precisely specify requirements that perhaps had to be inferred or were implied. Examples include expansion of tables to include values that were previously extrapolated and clarification of elevator duty requirements. Secondly, many of the revisions are necessary to avoid introducing conflicting requirements for similar products. Canada will be adopting a number of CANENA-developed trinational documents that are based on the IEC 60947 series of Standards and deal with industrial control products. The revisions will ensure that as the adoption of these IEC 60947–based documents continues, no conflict will be created with the requirements specified in this Standard.
For general information on the Standards of the Canadian Electrical Code, Part II, see the Preface of CAN/CSA-C22.2 No. 0.
This Standard is considered suitable for use for conformity assessment within the stated scope of the Standard.
This Standard was prepared by the Integrated Committee on Industrial Control, under the jurisdiction of the Technical Committee on Industrial Products and the Strategic Steering Committee on Requirements for Electrical Safety, and has been formally approved by the Technical Committee.
Scope
1.1
This Standard applies to control and protective devices, and accessory devices, rated at not more than 1500 V, for starting, stopping, regulating, controlling, or protecting electric motors, generators, heating apparatus, or other equipment used to control an industrial process that is intended to be installed and used in non-hazardous locations in accordance with the rules of the Canadian Electrical Code, Part I.
Notes:
(1) Examples of the industrial control devices covered by this Standard are manual and magnetic starters and controllers; thermal and magnetic overload relays; push-button stations (including selector switches and pilot lights); control circuit switches and relays; float-, flow-, pressure-, and vacuum-operated switches; resistors and rheostats; proximity switches; time-delay relays and switches; resistors and rheostats intended for heating and lighting, including those for motor generator fields; and control devices intended for heating and lighting.
(2) The term control as used throughout this Standard applies to both starters and controllers.
(3) Electrical instruments, such as meters, that can be included as part of control equipment are not covered by this Standard.
1.2
This Standard also applies to assemblies of industrial control and protective devices rated 750 V or less, and includes assemblies of automatic control and process equipment.
1.3
Certain equipment intended for use with electric elevators, air-conditioning and refrigeration equipment, cranes and hoists, electronic and solid-state control equipment, and TV-rated relays, etc., can be subject to additional requirements not included in this Standard.
1.4
This Standard does not apply to equipment covered by other CSA Standards, such as power supplies, programmable logic controllers, assemblies of equipment intended solely for the distribution of power, assemblies for controlling power factor, switches other than manual motor controllers, and electrical components intended to protect circuits other than motor branch-circuits.
1.5
The industrial control equipment covered by this Standard is intended for use in an ambient temperature of 0 to 40 °C.
1.6
In CSA Standards, shall is used to express a requirement, i.e., a provision that the user is obliged to satisfy in order to comply with the standard; should is used to express a recommendation or that which is advised but not required; and may is used to express an option or that which is permissible within the limits of the standard. Notes accompanying clauses do not include requirements or alternative requirements; the purpose of a note accompanying a clause is to separate from the text explanatory or informative material. Notes to tables and figures are considered part of the table or figure and may be written as requirements. Annexes are designated normative (mandatory) or informative (non-mandatory) to define their application.