Re: Low voltage lighting
Article 411.4 tells us that lighting systems under 30 volts must use a chapter 3 wiring method, or else the wire cannot be run through walls. One allowable method is to use UF cable, since UF is permitted by article 340.10 (4) to be used just like romex, which, or course, can be run through walls. So, it is permissible to use "landscape wire" through walls, if that "landscape wire" is UF. However, the Fine Homebuilding article seemed to be suggesting that type SPT "landscape wire" be used. (I didn't read the FH article, so I'm just going by the quote at the beginning of this thread.) This is doubly misleading, since SPT is not a landscape wire at all, as far as I can see. Secondly, SPT cannot be used in walls, which has already been pointed out.
Recently we wired some low voltage lights in a kitchen and used some landscape wire. The wire we used had "underground low energy lighting" printed on it, but it did not say UF anywhere. In fact, I think it said FT-2, if I remember correctly, but I could not find that wire type in any of the tables in the code book. The catalog we order the wire from says that the cable is listed for direct burial, but I'm not sure if that makes it a UF or not. If it is a UF cable, then it would be permissible, but it doesn't appear to be, even though it seems to be a direct burial cable. This is very confusing to me, since I thought that any cable that is listed and labeled for direct burial is, by definition, a type UF cable. Does anyone know about this?
Jason Rand