I hope this topic hasn't been beat to death here.
Posts and responses come up every now and then that will say something like "EMT is tubing, not conduit". And I often want to ask: "so what?". Does this actually change anything? Is this only stated because the "t" stands for "tubing", but in practice it's meaningless to differentiate? If tomorrow everything we know as EMT was all of the sudden called EMC (C for conduit), would anything change?
I understand that RMC, IMC, EMT, PVC Sch. 40, PVC Sch. 80, etc. are all different things, but whether something is categorized as conduit or tubing doesn't seem to matter. Each raceway type has its own installation requirements, and there isn't something in the NEC such as "Installations of A, B, and C are permitted with conduit but not with tubing" (or vice versa) that I am aware of.
To make matters worse and play devil's advocate a little bit, the NEC doesn't define "conduit" or "tubing" and if you look up "conduit" on m-w.com, the 2nd definition lists "a pipe, tube, or tile for protecting electric wires or cables .".... so when anyone calls out that EMT is tubing and not conduit, according to available definitions couldn't you say that tubing is a type of conduit, so yes EMT is conduit?
A lot of questions here, but it really comes down to: other than the fact that the "t" stands for "tubing" in EMT, does it matter whether it is tubing or conduit?
I like to consider myself a "words mean things" kind of a guy. In this context, it means that I recognize that "tubing" and "conduit" is used, and some people like to point this out, so there must be a reason to differentiate... but maybe there isn't.
Posts and responses come up every now and then that will say something like "EMT is tubing, not conduit". And I often want to ask: "so what?". Does this actually change anything? Is this only stated because the "t" stands for "tubing", but in practice it's meaningless to differentiate? If tomorrow everything we know as EMT was all of the sudden called EMC (C for conduit), would anything change?
I understand that RMC, IMC, EMT, PVC Sch. 40, PVC Sch. 80, etc. are all different things, but whether something is categorized as conduit or tubing doesn't seem to matter. Each raceway type has its own installation requirements, and there isn't something in the NEC such as "Installations of A, B, and C are permitted with conduit but not with tubing" (or vice versa) that I am aware of.
To make matters worse and play devil's advocate a little bit, the NEC doesn't define "conduit" or "tubing" and if you look up "conduit" on m-w.com, the 2nd definition lists "a pipe, tube, or tile for protecting electric wires or cables .".... so when anyone calls out that EMT is tubing and not conduit, according to available definitions couldn't you say that tubing is a type of conduit, so yes EMT is conduit?
A lot of questions here, but it really comes down to: other than the fact that the "t" stands for "tubing" in EMT, does it matter whether it is tubing or conduit?
I like to consider myself a "words mean things" kind of a guy. In this context, it means that I recognize that "tubing" and "conduit" is used, and some people like to point this out, so there must be a reason to differentiate... but maybe there isn't.