that will help, as will all the other posts, in figuring out your expenses, if that is what you want to do, but he was wanting to just give a bid. plus, if the owner is like all the ones i deal with, there isnt an electrical blueprint. that will take alot of time to fill one in for him, then lets say you give it to him with your estimate, then he gives it to somebody else who uses it to beat your bid. at least in my world that's how it goes.
here is some stuff for the op. if you don't do resi much you are sure to blow a couple of things.
You can NOT run your range light off'n your countertop receps. they 'shall have no other outlets' two exceptions only: plug for gas range and clock outlet.
You may not have to buy $65 AFCI breakers for all your 120V ckts if your local AHJ lets you. As i said in WA state only bed rooms need to be. and btw that includes the smoke alarms in the bedrooms too.
I hate AFCI's. i heard they improved the breakers to not nuisance trip but i still, given that i only have to run a ckt to each bedroom, (i think you are allowed 10 outlets on a 15A ckt), so you may or may not be able to put two bedrooms on one breaker, each outlet figure 180VA 15Ax120V is 1800W so, yeah, but it is not written in stone either, you can fudge alittle, with lights etc. That is why i charge more for closet lights and outlets, often times it will prohibit you from putting two rooms on one breaker, cha-ching, there goes another $65.
Also, i never anymore run an AFCI ckt wire within 12" of another circuit. never thru same hole, cross as close to 90 degrees etc. i have had a really bad time with nuisance tripping in the past.
You can run two or three bathroom gfi's only on one ckt, (we have been getting away with three), and run all the lights and fans from any other ckt. Or, you can run everything in the bathroom on one ckt. Floor heat units i think have to be on dedicated.
All outside outlets, 2 reqd, have to be marked WR. weather resistant, and they are about $15 each.
All outlets have to be tamper resistant, marked TR.
You supply all fart fans, and make sure your laundry fan is big enuf to serve as a whole house fan. Req'd here, as well is a timer control to automatically for some insane reason, turn the fan on periodically.
You can NOT run romex outside for more than about three feet. Even in liquidtite or any other conduit. Stupid i know. So if you have heat pump on roof or on slab, make your romex terminate on the outside wall.
Any pipe on the ground, hate to say, has to be in rigid steel or schd 80. Inspector asked me if you could roll a bbq on it or slide a lawn chair into it. How in the world that would hurt schd 40 or EMT is beyond me, but i have to do a change out on that on something i did here soon.
i like to run about a 1.5" pipe either up to the attic or down to the crawlspace just for future reference.
You have to lable, here at least, every cable when it comes into the panel with a sharpie. You may want to put a 2x4 sideways 12" above and below the panel to staple to as well.
Any 3 wire has to be landed on a 2pole breaker now. If you hard wire the Dishwasher then it has to have a breaker lock out on it. And if you put an outlet for it, they want it under the sink, not behind the dw now they're telling me. DW and disposal on same ckt okay if load calcs are only 80% capacity, which it almost always is, but you should check.
There is no hgt requirement for outlets or sw. hammer hgt works for outlets and 4 ft for sw. counter top outlets 4" lower. All accessible outlets in garage must be gfi. so not the g.door opener.
All grounds have to be made up for rough in. Make sure you know how to use a Buchanan if you use them. green wire nuts bite the big one.
Also make sure you only buy the longer Deep nail on boxes. If you dont you will be sorry.
Use push in connectors instead of set screw, cheaper and easier.
Need two ground rods w/#6
Need to bond metal gas and water pipes with #4
Dont try to daisy chain tv cable. you can daisy chain phone lines tho but always use those little phone line connectors you put in without stripping the wire and squeeze with your pliars.
Try to never run anything (power) to a light location. only switch legs. And try not to dead end three wire for 3 ways, although it's easy to do if you have to.
No outside boxes in same bay as an inside box.
Plastic nipples from panel to meter socket dont have to be bonded, and i believe you can run your ground wire thru one. if you use a metal nipple it has to be bonded either with a bonding locknut if you are in the biggest hole, or with a bonding bushing if there are large concentric knockouts.
keep tv/phone 12" away from power
consult local power co for requirements for securing service mast.
URD is okay for service wire
#2 Aluminum is only good for 90A anymore if its feeding a subpanel
use lots o noalox
dont run wire to breakers up and down the panel before you land them, cut them to fit.
dont forget your AFCI neutrals DONT land on the neutral bar!! i twist them around the hots, like i do with the line side of a GFI in a gfi box.
When you make up boxes thy to leave them so there are only two wires going to the switch on trim out, and no more than four wires for outlets ie more than two cables, pigtail them
watch your box fill, know that 14 ga is 2cu inches per wire and 12 is 2.25 and grounds only count once. also that devices count as two wires and gfi's now count as four. i think. you dont want to have to remove boxes, which is why i say use just the deep ones, esp if you have to shove a gfi in one.
Keep your point of attachment on the mast over three feet from the roof, 8 ft if it's flat. you could go down to 18" but there are conditions for that and there are exceptions to much. you need 10' hgt over grass, 12' over driveways.
am i stating the obvious? well good.
make damned sure your boxed DONT stick out farther than 1/2" in alittle is ten times better than sticking out.
w/o a box connector or clamp you have to staple within 8 inches of a box, not 12"/ those tabs you push in on the black boxes count as a clamp. those tabs you knock OUT of the blue boxes are not clamps. (one holds the wire, one doesnt.)
Oh yeah, i HATE using a 3.0 round box for an outside outlet and will never do so again. And now builders are putting blocks where outside outlets and porch lights go. So you have to drill it for a 3-0 box.
Keep the fart fan motors and elec. heaters in the box till trim out, dont install on rough in
man, what else can i think of??? Anything with a fuse/breaker has to have that 3 ft of clearance in front of it. Keep that in mind for the A/C disco.
I dont know. Anybody else out there got more tips for this guy, lay them on him.
1 smokie in each bedroom and outside hall way. one on each floor,
Lights are required only in kitchen bath and stairways. ceiling lights that is.
I also usually throw a keyless in the attic too. anywhere there's equipment needs an outlet. gfi in crawl space. w/in 25' of outdoor equipment. equip in the attic or crawl also needs a light near it.
No wires within six feet of attic access on tops of ceiling joist/truss. That's if no permanent stairs. if there is then none anywhere you can walk.
No more than 3 cables per hole. no more than 2 in some places. has to do with fire areas. and i'm not too clear on that either. 4 cable in same hole for more than 2 ft is bundling and you would have to derate.
Drill big holes! but not too big, they measure from the edge of the hole, not where the wire is in the hole. and guess what. 2x4's are no longer 3.5 inches wide. they shrunk them. so make sure you nail plate where you need them.
Keep your refer outlet non protected.
There was a mention in the latest Elec. Contractor mag, where mike holt, (some smart guy) says that all outlets in the kitchen had to be gfi protected even if they weren't above the counter top. so i would check with your AHJ on whether the DW and Frige outlets can not be gfi, or if they have to be.
Around here you have to buy a $15 extra permit for every thermostat. Also, not all thermostats with disconnect all power to an elec wall heater, as in using a 2 wire thermostat for a 240V heater.
hey, i gotta go.
i just want to say Thank you to God for dropping a big money job right into my lap this morning. Wow! i got something i prayed for! doesnt happen often. but i'll take it!!!!! ps big money to me is a $7500 job that takes $3500 worth of material.