Source: https://ecode360.com/8129982
Timestamp: 2018-01-24 09:27:52
Document Index: 610483987

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 28', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235', '§ 235']

City of Pawtucket, RI Heating Equipment
§ 235-2 Compliance required; permit required.
§ 235-3 Restrictions upon installation of tank or range boilers.
§ 235-4 Temperature relief valves or fusible plugs on tanks or range boilers.
§ 235-5 Pressure relief valves in service water heating systems.
§ 235-6 Temperature or pressure reliefs required on tank or automatic storage water heaters.
§ 235-7 Thermostatic pilot or gas shutoff for certain gas heaters; exception.
§ 235-8 Connection of certain water heaters to chimney or flue.
§ 235-9 Connection of tank heaters with flues.
§ 235-10 Installation of certain water heaters in bedrooms, bathrooms or closets prohibited.
§ 235-11 Use of oxygen or gas under pressure for combustion.
§ 235-12 Compliance required.
§ 235-13 Enforcement.
Chapter 235: Heating Equipment
[HISTORY: Adopted by the Council of the City of Pawtucket approved 10-17-1967 by Ch. No. 1135 as Secs. 16-1 through 16-13 of the 1966 Code. Amendments noted where applicable.]
Air pollution — See Ch. 100.
Electrical standards — See Ch. 186.
Mechanical standards — See Ch. 274.
Plumbing — See Ch. 306.
Chapter 235 : Heating Equipment
For the purposes of this chapter, the following words and phrases shall have the meanings respectively ascribed to them by this section, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
AUTOMATIC INSTANTANEOUS WATER HEATER
A large copper coil using gas as a fuel, surrounded by a cast-iron or steel jacket and equipped with either thermostatic or water value control, and not connected with a tank, range boiler or other storage tank, the water supply coming directly from the house piping and delivering through the hot water piping system.
A tank in which service water, heated by a tank heater or base burner, is stored and the temperature of which is controlled by a thermostat that actuates the fuel valve.
A deputy inspector or some other properly authorized representative of the inspector.
Either a manufactured city gas or other gas used for heating purposes, such as propane, pyrofax and butane, usually distributed in containers for use in rural districts.
Any type of gas burner which with thermostatic control is used to create steam or heat hot water or air in connection with an existing heating boiler or heating furnace.
GAS HOUSE HEATING BOILER
A cast-iron or steel sectional boiler of either the steam or hot water type using gas as a fuel.[1]
GAS HOUSE HEATING FURNACE
A furnace of the general hot air type using gas as a fuel.
The plumbing/mechanical inspector of the city.[2]
The original or subsequent placing, equipping or connecting of apparatus.
Hot water heated by any fuel to be used for any purpose except power or heating.
A copper coil through which water is heated, the coil being surrounded by a cast-iron or steel jacket.
TANK OR RANGE BOILER
Any vessel of any type or construction used to store heated service water in which hot water may be confined to or subject to a pressure of fifteen (15) pounds or more per square inch pressure above atmosphere, except any pressure vessel used for generating or storing steam or hot water for the purpose of power or heating and except any boiler as defined in R.I.G.L. § 28-25-1.
§ 235-2 Compliance required; permit required. [1]
No tank heater or automatic storage water heater shall be installed unless such tank heater and any tank or range boiler used in connection therewith or such automatic storage water heater is constructed and equipped in compliance with the provisions of this chapter, nor unless a permit for such installation shall first have been secured from the inspector, nor shall the same be placed in service until approved by him or her.
§ 235-3 Restrictions upon installation of tank or range boilers. [1]
No tank or range boiler shall be installed for use on a working pressure greater than forty-two and one-half percent (42 1/2%) of the tested pressure stamped on the tank or range boiler by the manufacturer, nor if solder which fuses at a temperature below six hundred degrees Fahrenheit (600° F.) has been used to hold the tank or range boiler together and not merely for the purpose of making it watertight, nor if solder is used in its construction, unless such solder will not become weakened beyond the normal strength of the material of which the shell and heads are constructed, when subjected to a temperature up to three hundred degrees Fahrenheit (300° F.), nor shall it be installed in any event unless it has been tested to at least two hundred (200) pounds per square inch hydraulic pressure and bears the name of its manufacture and his or her stamp showing at what hydraulic pressure per square inch it has actually been tested.
No tank or range boiler connected with any water supply system except a gravity system opened to the atmosphere or a tank in which water is heated by steam at a temperature not exceeding two hundred fifty degrees Fahrenheit (250° F.) by means of a pipe or coil located within such tank shall be installed unless it is equipped with a temperature relief valve or fusible plug, with a discharge opening extended to a suitable drain, which will prevent the temperature of the water in the top of the tank or range boiler from exceeding two hundred fifty degrees Fahrenheit (250° F.), such valve or plug to be located in the hot water outlet pipe between the heater and the tank or range boiler, provided that such pipe is not less than three-fourths (3/4) inch in diameter, or in the top of the tank or range boiler or in the hot water outlet connection in a fitting which is directly connected to the top of such tank or range boiler.
Such temperature relief valve or fusible plug may be located directly in the tank or range boiler at a point not more than six (6) inches above or below the center between the top and bottom in which case the fusible plug must prevent the temperature of the water in the central portion of the tank or range boiler from exceeding two hundred twelve degrees Fahrenheit (212° F.).
§ 235-5 Pressure relief valves in service water heating systems. [1]
No service water heating system equipped with a reducing valve or check valve in the cold water line supplying a tank or range boiler or a check valve embodied in the water meter supplying a tank or range boiler shall be installed unless, in addition to the temperature relief, it has a pressure relief valve located at a point where it will relieve the pressure within the tank or range boiler when and if such pressure exceeds seventy-five (75) pounds per square inch hydraulic pressure.
§ 235-6 Temperature or pressure reliefs required on tank or automatic storage water heaters. [1]
No tank heater or automatic storage water heater shall be installed unless such tank heater or automatic storage water heater or the tanks or other apparatus connected therewith shall be provided with a temperature relief and a pressure relief in accordance with the regulations contained in §§ 235-4 and 235-5, except as therein otherwise provided.
§ 235-7 Thermostatic pilot or gas shutoff for certain gas heaters; exception. [1]
No automatic storage water heater, gas house heating boiler, gas house heating furnace or gas conversion burner shall be installed unless it is equipped with a thermostatic pilot or thermostatic gas shutoff which will actuate the main gas valve to a closed position in case the pilot light is extinguished nor unless it is properly connected to a chimney or to an equivalent flue discharging outside the building, provided that it shall not be required to connect to a chimney or flue any automatic storage water heater whose consumption of gas does not exceed ten (10) cubic feet per hour.
§ 235-8 Connection of certain water heaters to chimney or flue. [1]
No automatic instantaneous water heater shall be installed unless it is properly connected to a chimney or to any equivalent flue discharging outside building.
§ 235-9 Connection of tank heaters with flues. [1]
No tank heater shall be installed in a room having a capacity of less than one thousand (1,000) cubic feet unless it is properly connected to a chimney or suitable flue.
No tank heater or automatic storage or automatic instantaneous water heater shall be installed in a bedroom, bathroom or closet.
No person shall use oxygen or gas under pressure, either separately or in combination, to aid combustion, unless effective means shall be provided to prevent reverse travel in the direction of the gas main, nor unless a suitable check valve has been installed in the gas line between the gas meter and the appliance using oxygen or gas.
No person shall install or assist in installing any apparatus contrary to any of the provisions of this chapter, or turn on gas for any apparatus contrary to any of the provisions of this chapter, or turn on or use air, oxygen or gas contrary to any of the provisions of this chapter. The owner or occupant of premises shall not be regarded as a person who installs or assists in installing apparatus or who turns on or uses air, oxygen or gas, unless he or she personally installs or assists in installing apparatus or personally turns on air, oxygen or gas.
It shall be part of the duties of the inspector to enforce all provisions of this chapter, irrespective of whether or not permits are necessary.