KG5RPZ
Member
- Location
- Pineville, Lousiana
Good evening folks, I have a simple question, I know the general answer to this question but not in the context of how I intend to install it.
I have a home office/ Ham Radio room. I have an amplifier that will need a 220v 20 amp power source, 10 years ago when I roughed in the walls of the office forseeing the need for potential growth in the future, I installed metal 4 square boxes with mud rings, and 3/4 in stub ups into the attic area of my house. I did this so it would be easy to fish something down the wall at a later time if it was ever needed.
I plan on using one of these conduits as a means for getting my 220v feed into the 4" box via the 3/4 conduit. Here is what I intended on doing. I want to install a 3/4 EMT male compression fitting over the 3/4" conduit, put a 3/4" coupling on that, and finally put a Romex connector snugly tightened into the 3/4" coupling. Now this is where the gray area is. I know that you cannot install UF or NM cable in conduit over 24" aka a thimble or nipple type scenerio. But the drop or full length of the conduit is 10' or 120", so if I was to strip out the last say 12' of my 10/2 UF wire would that be code compliant?
The reason I'm using the UF 10/2 wire is because it will go from the receptacle through the conduit, into my attic space and pop out where my service entrance feeds a sub panel inside the house. The UF cable will exit the attic at this location and be tie wrapped behind the 2" feeder for the sup banel until it gets to the outside 200 amp main breaker that has the 6 circuits and feed thru lugs for the sub panel inside my house. I'll then land the 10/2 inside the outdoor 200 main panel with feed thru lugs on a 20 amp double pole breaker, and ground it as required. The whole installation is temporary, Im building a 60x40 shop, and will have a 20' x 14' office/radio room in the new shop, but it might be 2 years before I get to that point.
So would this be code compliant if I strip the UF wire where it goes into the conduit? I assume the UF individual wires are THHN rated but I'm not certain.
I have worked in the Industrial world for so long, I really dont have a lot of working knowledge with Residential wiring methods and materials. We always run our circuits in rigid conduit, and pulled stranded cable at work. I have wired this house with a buddy over 15 years ago now. And it is all up to code, and I wanna make sure this addition is also safe and within the current code.
As an added bonus I have an outdoor TVSS, tied to the service entrance 200 amp disconnect panel an LEA type, and another TVSS at the sub panel Square D QO also Square D brand. So as you can see I'm the type to go far and beyond code and doing things right is my primary objective.
I could read the code book, and I could find the answer, but I know someone here already knows the answer to this question and rather than take a chance of me misinterpreting the code book, I'm here asking. But I do know what the code book is, how to read it, and where to find the information. If you wanna say I'm being lazy... I guess I'll be guilty lol...
Thanks in advance!
I have a home office/ Ham Radio room. I have an amplifier that will need a 220v 20 amp power source, 10 years ago when I roughed in the walls of the office forseeing the need for potential growth in the future, I installed metal 4 square boxes with mud rings, and 3/4 in stub ups into the attic area of my house. I did this so it would be easy to fish something down the wall at a later time if it was ever needed.
I plan on using one of these conduits as a means for getting my 220v feed into the 4" box via the 3/4 conduit. Here is what I intended on doing. I want to install a 3/4 EMT male compression fitting over the 3/4" conduit, put a 3/4" coupling on that, and finally put a Romex connector snugly tightened into the 3/4" coupling. Now this is where the gray area is. I know that you cannot install UF or NM cable in conduit over 24" aka a thimble or nipple type scenerio. But the drop or full length of the conduit is 10' or 120", so if I was to strip out the last say 12' of my 10/2 UF wire would that be code compliant?
The reason I'm using the UF 10/2 wire is because it will go from the receptacle through the conduit, into my attic space and pop out where my service entrance feeds a sub panel inside the house. The UF cable will exit the attic at this location and be tie wrapped behind the 2" feeder for the sup banel until it gets to the outside 200 amp main breaker that has the 6 circuits and feed thru lugs for the sub panel inside my house. I'll then land the 10/2 inside the outdoor 200 main panel with feed thru lugs on a 20 amp double pole breaker, and ground it as required. The whole installation is temporary, Im building a 60x40 shop, and will have a 20' x 14' office/radio room in the new shop, but it might be 2 years before I get to that point.
So would this be code compliant if I strip the UF wire where it goes into the conduit? I assume the UF individual wires are THHN rated but I'm not certain.
I have worked in the Industrial world for so long, I really dont have a lot of working knowledge with Residential wiring methods and materials. We always run our circuits in rigid conduit, and pulled stranded cable at work. I have wired this house with a buddy over 15 years ago now. And it is all up to code, and I wanna make sure this addition is also safe and within the current code.
As an added bonus I have an outdoor TVSS, tied to the service entrance 200 amp disconnect panel an LEA type, and another TVSS at the sub panel Square D QO also Square D brand. So as you can see I'm the type to go far and beyond code and doing things right is my primary objective.
I could read the code book, and I could find the answer, but I know someone here already knows the answer to this question and rather than take a chance of me misinterpreting the code book, I'm here asking. But I do know what the code book is, how to read it, and where to find the information. If you wanna say I'm being lazy... I guess I'll be guilty lol...
Thanks in advance!