Hendrix
Senior Member
- Location
- New England
I saw it but I don't believe it. EC thinks that he can feed a switch with #12 ga. and go to his fixtures with #14 ga. wire. Please direct me to the article that prohibits this.:-?
There isn't one, specifically speaking. The #14 he wants to use would still be branch-circuit conductors. That it supplies a single load, and even a known one, does not matter. They are not 'tap' or fixture' wires.I saw it but I don't believe it. EC thinks that he can feed a switch with #12 ga. and go to his fixtures with #14 ga. wire. Please direct me to the article that prohibits this.:-?
The OCPD is a 20 amp breaker to a switch box, then to a heat, vent , light in 14 ga. wire. The unit draws 14.6 amps when everything is running.If, by chance, the circuit's overcurrent protection device is a 20 amp breaker, then 240.4(D) would prohibit what you are describing. If the OCPD is a 15 amp breaker, then what you are describing is acceptable, as Larry has already said.
The OCPD is a 20 amp breaker to a switch box, then to a heat, vent , light in 14 ga. wire. The unit draws 14.6 amps when everything is running.
Yep. Missed that one, I did.The thread title specifies a 20a ckt, which I took to include the OCPD and not just the #12 portion of the circuit.
I saw it but I don't believe it. EC thinks that he can feed a switch with #12 ga. and go to his fixtures with #14 ga. wire. Please direct me to the article that prohibits this.:-?