1. Shall be installed only if the lighting control or light source complies with all of the applicable requirements of Section 110.9.
2. Lighting controls may be individual devices or systems consisting of two or more components.
ii. Provide an automatic holiday shutoff feature that turns off all connected loads for at least 24 hours and then resumes normally scheduled operation.
i. Have sunrise and sunset prediction accuracy within plus‐or‐minus 15 minutes and timekeeping accuracy within 5 minutes per year;
ii. Be capable of displaying date, current time, sunrise time, sunset time, and switching times for each step during programming;
iii. Be capable of automatically adjusting for daylight savings time; and
iv. Have the ability to independently offset the on and off for each channel by at least 90 minutes before and after sunrise or sunset.
A. Automatically return to its most recent time delay settings within 60 minutes of the last received input when left in calibration mode;
C. Provide an offsetting that produces a zero lumen output; and
D. For wall box dimmers and associated switches designed for use in three way circuits, be capable of turning lights off, and on to the level set by the dimmer if the lights are off.
A. Be capable of automatically turning the controlled lights in the area either off or down no more than 20 minutes after the area has been vacated;
B. For manual-on controls, have a grace period of no less than 15 seconds and no more than 30 seconds to turn on lighting automatically after the sensor has timed out; and
C. Provide a visible status signal that indicates that the device is operating properly, or that it has failed or malfunctioned. The visible status signal may have an override that turns off the signal.
Exception to Section 110.9(b)4: Occupant Sensing Control systems may consist of a combination of single or multilevel Occupant, Motion, or Vacancy Sensor Controls, provided that components installed to comply with manual-on requirements shall not be capable of conversion by occupants from manual-on to automatic-on functionality.
A. Sensors shall not incorporate switches or mechanical devices that allow the sensor to be disabled without changing the settings of the control.
B. Sensors that utilize ultrasonic radiation for detection of occupants shall:
i. comply with 21 C.F.R. part 1002.12;
ii. not emit audible sound; and
C. Sensors that utilize microwave radiation for detection of occupants shall:
i. comply with 47 C.F.R. parts 2 and 15; and
ii. not emit radiation in excess of 1 milliwatt per square centimeter measured at no more than 5 centimeters from the emission surface of the device.
A. So that it is visible for the enforcement agency’s field inspection without opening coverplates, fixtures, or panels; and
B. Permanently marked on the circuit breaker; and
C. On a factory-printed label that is permanently affixed to a nonremovable base-plate inside the wiring compartment.
2. Shall have a conspicuous factory installed label permanently affixed to the inside of the wiring compartment warning against removing, tampering with, rewiring, or bypassing the device; and
1. Shall be listed as defined in Section 100.1; and
TABLE 110.9-A - ULTRASOUND MAXIMUM DECIBEL VALUES
| MID-FREQUENCY OF SOUND PRESSURE THIRD-OCTAVE BAND (IN kHz) | MAXIMUM DB LEVEL WITHIN THIRD-OCTAVE BAND (IN dB REFERENCE 20 MICROPASCALS) |
| Less than 20 | 80 |
| 20 or more to less than 25 | 105 |
| 25 or more to less than 31.5 | 110 |
| 31.5 or more | 115 |
Note: Authority: Sections 25213, 25218, 25218.5, 25402 and 25402.1, Public Resources Code. Reference: Sections 25007, 25008, 25218.5, 25310, 25402, 25402.1, 25402.4, 25402.5, 25402.8, and 52943, Public Resources Code