Dedicated Circuits

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augie47

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yes, yes, yes, if the circuit is a 15 amp circuit. :grin: Art. 210.52(B)(1)except. 2

Dennis, I don't know if that requires it to he dedicated. Can I not still feed my pantry light (etc) from that circuit ?
{as long as I comply with 210.23(A)(1)}
 

Dennis Alwon

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Dennis, I don't know if that requires it to he dedicated. Can I not still feed my pantry light (etc) from that circuit ?
{as long as I comply with 210.23(A)(1)}
I don't think so. It reads clearly to me if you use a 15 amp circuit then it must be from an individual branch circuit.

Anyone else have input.
 

augie47

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I enjoy your posts. :)
I had not given that thought.... in NEC language is "individual circuit" a "dedicated circuit"... quite possible ...
as you ask.. others ????
 

mcclary's electrical

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Location
VA
I enjoy your posts. :)
I had not given that thought.... in NEC language is "individual circuit" a "dedicated circuit"... quite possible ...
as you ask.. others ????



Although I agree with Dennis, I cannot produce solid definitions of dedicated branch circuit vs individual branch circuit
 

charlie b

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Ah, but riddle me this: I have a refrigerator that is plugged into a receptacle on a 20 amp branch circuit that also powers the nearby overhead light, and this is not an NEC violation! How? :-?
 
My understanding was that any fixed appliance in a kitchen should have a dedicated circuit. Refers, garbage disposals, dishwashers are always on there own circut..... at least in the homes I rope.
 

charlie b

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My understanding was that any fixed appliance in a kitchen should have a dedicated circuit. Refers, garbage disposals, dishwashers are always on there own circut.
Your understanding is incorrect.
Depends on the meaning of the word, "should." ;) Is it required by code? No. Is it a good design and installation practice? Yes. Is it worth the additional cost? That is up to the owner.

 

augie47

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Tennessee
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Dennis, you are correct and I as wrong.
I looked for but missed the NEC definition of "Branch Circuit, Individual".
Refrigerators on a 15 amp circuit must have no other utilization equipment.
 

kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
Does the NEC require refrigerators to be on a dedicated circuit?

Not required.

yes, yes, yes, if the circuit is a 15 amp circuit. :grin: Art. 210.52(B)(1)except. 2

Applies only to dwelling kitchens and basically permits it to not be on small appliance branch circuit. If you put it on 20 amp circuit it is a small appliance branch circuit even if only receptacle on the circuit - and you could have only one other SABC installed and still meet code.
 
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