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EM Elevator Mechanic (2012-10-24)

50 Questions, Time Allowed 2 1/2 Hours

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  • Closed Book Out of Stock

    NFPA 70: National Electrical Code (NEC)

    Publication Year: 2008

    $91.41

    Only the 2008 NEC includes the latest rules for electrical installation in residential, commercial, and industrial occupancies. It also introduces:New article on Critical Operations Power Systems with provisions for electrical security in public and private facilities that must stay online during a crisis, such as public safety dispatch centers and hospital ICUsNew article on Electrified Truck Parking Spaces with NEC rules for outlets to run on-board electrical systems, reducing truck emissions and fuel consumption caused by idling during driver rest timesRevised requirements for AFCI and GFCIs in dwellings. Since arcing faults on wiring systems and extension cords can cause home fires, the Code expands AFCI use to living areas.New rules for tamper-resistant receptacles respond to NEISS reports that thousands of children are treated in hospitals every year for burns received as a result of inserting objects into receptacles.New provisions in Article 210, Article 410, and elsewhere in the Code reduce worker hazards and correlate with NFPA 70E® worker safety rules.Plus hundreds of other revisions

  • Closed Book Out of Stock

    ASME A17.3 Safety Code For Existing Elevators And Escalators 2005

    Publication Year: 2005

    $125.53

    A17.3 is intended to serve as the basis for state and local jurisdictional authorities in adopting retroactive requirements for existing elevators and escalators to enhance the safety of the general public. It is also intended as a standard reference of safety requirements for the guidance of architects, engineers, insurance companies, manufacturers, and contractors, and as a standard of safety practices for building owners and managers of structures where existing elevator equipment covered in the scope of the Code is used. The purpose of this Code is to establish minimum requirements that will provide a reasonable degree of safety for the general public. While many of these requirements will also increase the degree of safety for the elevator mechanic and inspector, this area has not been specifically addressed at this time.
  • Closed Book Out of Stock

    ASME A17.1 Safety Code for Elevators and Escalators

    Publication Year: 2007

    $341.64

    A17.1 covers the design, construction, operation, inspection, testing, maintenance, alteration, and repair of the following equipment, its associated parts, and its hoist ways, where located in or adjacent to a building or structure: (a) hoisting and lowering mechanisms, equipped with a car or platform, which move between two or more landings. This equipment includes, but is not limited to, elevators; (b) power driven stairways and walkways for carrying persons between landings. This equipment includes, but is not limited to escalators and moving walks; (c) hoisting and lowering mechanisms equipped with a car which serves two or more landings and is restricted to the carrying of material by its limited size or limited access to the car. This equipment includes, but is not limited to, dumbwaiters and material lifts.
  • Closed Book Out of Stock

    Mike Holt's Illustrated Guide to Basic Electrical Theory

    3rd Edition

    $57.50

  • Closed Book Out of Stock

    ASME A17.2 Guide for Inspection of Elevators, Escalators and Moving Walks

    Publication Year: 2012

    $207.69