I just have three questions and would like some imput. The insulation on romex is not approved for wet locations. So with that you are not allowed to strip the sheathing off and use the conductors inside of sealtite to wire from a weatherproof disconnect to an AC compressor in a home. So.....is it against the code to wire the weatherproof disconnect that is mounted to the house with romex that is feed from inside?
The second question is SEU/SER cable is used on the exterior for services. The insulation is XHHW-2 (printed on the sheathing) so this means the cable is approved for use in wet locations (outside). If you were to install SER in PVC and run it outside and underground to a garage for a sub-panel (10' away from house) this would be against the code. Is the only reason that this is against the code is because each conductor in not labeled with XHHW-2 only the outer sheathing? If this is the case then why can it be installed for services?
The third question is anit-short bushings (redheads). They are installed on BX cable but not required to be installed on MC cable. I realize that the casing on the BX is the ground and MC has it's own insulated grounding conductor, but isn't the anti-short used to prevent the sharp edges of the metal from possibly cutting through the insulation (or chaffing) on the conductors.
The second question is SEU/SER cable is used on the exterior for services. The insulation is XHHW-2 (printed on the sheathing) so this means the cable is approved for use in wet locations (outside). If you were to install SER in PVC and run it outside and underground to a garage for a sub-panel (10' away from house) this would be against the code. Is the only reason that this is against the code is because each conductor in not labeled with XHHW-2 only the outer sheathing? If this is the case then why can it be installed for services?
The third question is anit-short bushings (redheads). They are installed on BX cable but not required to be installed on MC cable. I realize that the casing on the BX is the ground and MC has it's own insulated grounding conductor, but isn't the anti-short used to prevent the sharp edges of the metal from possibly cutting through the insulation (or chaffing) on the conductors.
