Yes. All other localities allow leaning residents.dereckbc said:Is Chicago the only area that requires residents to be plumbed? Just curious.
Especially at closing time!LarryFine said:Yes. All other localities allow leaning residents.
infinity said:Is it true that Chicagoland requires all occupancies to be wired with EMT and not any cable? Even one family dwellings?
russ said:I've never installed a NM cable for anything, except temporary feeds like temp lights.
As for being more costly, I'd have to assume that might be true.
Who does it in NM, and whats it cost per opening.
Who does it in EMT and whats it cost per opening.
This may not be a perfect pole, since the prices may be different because of economics of the area.
How much of a break the contractor gives at selling time, I have no idea.
russ said:Just giving a educated guess that its about $50 an opening around here, lets not count the cost of circuits, and the service.
I'm sure there are lower and higher prices.
Are NM opening that much lower? I,m really currious.
Edit to add: We use AC and MC for fishing into exsisting walls and ceilings, not open work.
russ said:Yes. IT's true.
Also true for most areas in the surrounding suburbs.
Don't be so sure. It would probably cost me 3 or 4 or 5 times the NM cable price to install EMT in a wood framed, single family dwelling. It is a more expensive procedure, but it would hardly line my pockets, anymore than doing any sort of expensive work would. Expensive work necessarily has a higher net profit, but it's not my fault that EMT in a wood framed dwelling is expensive to install.infinity said:Conduit in a one family dwelling for 3X, 4X, 5X, 10X the price of NM. Sounds like someone is getting their pockets filled.
celtic said:I think it's a GREAT idea.
The average Homer would be clueless,possibly, resulting in more work for me.
mdshunk said:Don't be so sure. It would probably cost me 3 or 4 or 5 times the NM cable price to install EMT in a wood framed, single family dwelling. It is a more expensive procedure, but it would hardly line my pockets, anymore than doing any sort of expensive work would. Expensive work necessarily has a higher net profit, but it's not my fault that EMT in a wood framed dwelling is expensive to install.
infinity said:More work is fine, but saying that on this side of a city border that you can't use products that they've been using safely for 50-60 years on the other side of the border is just criminal. When certain decisions are made for political reasons someone is getting hosed.
celtic said:In that same vein, does NYC allow RX in a SFH?
The cost is only about 1.25 x an NM job. I have been told that there will be a presentation at the ROC meeting showing that Chicago has a much lower rate of dwelling unit fires than other parts of the country and that one of the reasons that this is so is the "pipe" code.Conduit in a one family dwelling for 3X, 4X, 5X, 10X