JIC is no more, and never was an official regulatory agency. Most of it's standards have been adapted by other oficial sources such as OSHA and the NFPA 79.
Check out thread242-1929
Having said that, I too could not find his particular issue mentioned. It may be one that slipped through the cracks, maybe intentionally, because I know for a fact that it caused may European manufacturers nothing but headaches since they had no equivalent standards and did not have products that would work.
What the JIC required was bi-directional interlocking: you could not open the door without turning off the disconnect, but also you could not turn on the disconnect without latching the door
first.. IEC safety disconnect products are based on the combined function, where as soon as you energize the disconnect, the disconnect mechanism interlocks with the door so that you cannot open it. The subtle difference is that the door is not necessarily "latched" in that you can have the door partially ajar even with the disconnect On. That would not have satisfied the old JIC standard.
I don't know what went on in the back rooms, but I suspect that under pressure from international manufacturers (who now own most of the old NEMA manufacturers), that subtle difference was allowed to quietly drop off the radar.
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