aftershock
Senior Member
- Location
- Memphis, TN
I have been doing electrical work for close to seven years now.Im not "book smart" when it comes to the NEC. Alot of the things I learn about is from experiance. I dont do new construction unless it is an addition. I am mainly old work and remodles. I do alot of jobs as well, where a home inspection has been done and I am there to correct what the inspector has found.
First off, these home inspectors dont check everything and I find some of the things they put down , are things they have no clue about. Example,, writing up a 20 amp circuit feeding a "no fuse" diconnect for a central air conditioner with a minimum circuit amps of 18. something and a max fuse of say 30.
Also, going to jobs where I find more problems than the inspector. Since I dont hesitate to crawl under a house, I tell ya,, I find more violations. Multiple open splices in wire. Wire nailed to the bottom of the floor joist (not near a "rat rail". Wire running directly on the ground.
I tell you, damnit, if you going to pick a job to do,, do it right and to its fullest.
Sorry to rant,, had a bad day.
First off, these home inspectors dont check everything and I find some of the things they put down , are things they have no clue about. Example,, writing up a 20 amp circuit feeding a "no fuse" diconnect for a central air conditioner with a minimum circuit amps of 18. something and a max fuse of say 30.
Also, going to jobs where I find more problems than the inspector. Since I dont hesitate to crawl under a house, I tell ya,, I find more violations. Multiple open splices in wire. Wire nailed to the bottom of the floor joist (not near a "rat rail". Wire running directly on the ground.
I tell you, damnit, if you going to pick a job to do,, do it right and to its fullest.
Sorry to rant,, had a bad day.