- Occupation
- Licensed Electrician
You've seen a lot of this have you?....Even the best conduit on the other hand gets wrecked when the other trades go into drop ceilings and inadvertently break apart everything.
You've seen a lot of this have you?....Even the best conduit on the other hand gets wrecked when the other trades go into drop ceilings and inadvertently break apart everything.
Absolutely, but that has nothing to do with the wire-vs-conduit-EGC debate.Right. But beyond a circuit length the impedance still adds up, particularly on the hot.
Absolutely, but that has nothing to do with the wire-vs-conduit-EGC debate.
That's more of a sub-panels-and-feeders-vs-long-branch-circuits discussion.
You've seen a lot of this have you?
I am rather fascinated by how and when this wire EGC obsession started. It was well before I started in the late 90's.
Have you?Have you ever been in a drop ceiling, particularity in a place with high turn over?
Have you?
Your occupation says Electricity, not Electrician. What kind of work experience do you have working on conduit installations?I have. Conduit is to easily seperated from its fittings.
Your occupation says Electricity, not Electrician. What kind of work experience do you have working on conduit installations?
Your occupation says Electricity, not Electrician. What kind of work experience do you have working on conduit installations?
The EGC is not bonded to the metal box.Anyone do full size EGCs for circuits up to 60 amps?
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This table from the British standard is more like our 250.66 it is not used for branch circuits.
The EGC is not bonded to the metal box.
This table from the British standard is more like our 250.66 it is not used for branch circuits.
The minimum size EGC in BS 7671 for a branch circuit is a 2.5mm2 wich is about a 13 AWG.
The 16 mm2 amounts to a 5 awg.
I will say it is a nice table.
I'm out of service work at the moment. But I've seen enough to form an opinion.
I think I understand now. If you want to form an opinion based on a bunch of stuff you read on the internet then that's fine. The Cult of the Green Wire has taken over a lot of minds in the electrical industry.Here are what some EEs say about it:
I would take their advice and forget about the Z of conduit, but I only care about it in that if a knicked hot touched conduit between two j-boxes that the breaker actually clear.
I think I understand now. If you want to form an opinion based on a bunch of stuff you read on the internet then that's fine. The Cult of the Green Wire has taken over a lot of minds in the electrical industry.
Correct. With a self-grounding yoke, the EGC connection to the device is optional; the connection to the box is mandatory.Even if the ground terminal has a strap to the metal yoke plate?
Correct. With a self-grounding yoke, the EGC connection to the device is optional; the connection to the box is mandatory.
No. That's what I'm saying.Can't you hit the receptacle first, then use the yoke to hit the box?
NoCan't you hit the receptacle first, then use the yoke to hit the box?
If you have a metal casing, it should be capable of clearing for a shorting hot. Thats why I think all MC cable needs a bond strip.