Rockyd said:Dennis,
Excessive moisture or dampness sounds like an AHJ call, and the location in the country , might determine the AHJ's thoughts.
300.9 Raceways in Wet Locations Above Grade. Where raceways are installed in wet locations above grade, the interior of these raceways shall be considered to be a wet location. Insulated conductors and cables installed in raceways in wet locations above grade shall comply with 310.8(C).
jetlag said:I read the post on NMB to AC . There was a short pvc outside up to DISC switch. The replies were the NMB must terminate in box before leaving the house and continue on with thwn. My guestion is if NMB runs thru outside wall into back of a surface mounted WP fixture box is the wire considered outside and against code? What if the box is flush mounted, does that make it not outside. I guess we should run NMB to the switch and short piece UF to light?
georgestolz said:There have been a few threads on this topic, though I don't recall any consensus. I just found this thread from 01/2006 only because it had a lot of replies.
Around here, NM in conduit outdoors violations happen regularly, I'd say roughly 50% of the AHJ's enforce it. It has been tightening up over time, I believe.
As far as a box mounted inside an exterior wall covered by a light fixture, I don't see any problem with that. The NM is not outside. Is the insulation of the wall outside? No. Neither is the NM, IMO.
Dennis Alwon said:Here's another one for you jetlag.
Firstly, when is a conductor considered outside the building. It would appear as soon as it penetrates the exterior wall. Thus---NM should not be allowed to feed a/c units since the wire is not marked. I wish the NEC would put pressure on the wire manufacturers to label the wire in the cable.
Secondly, have you ever installed a weatherproof panel as the House Panel. Around here in NC there are thousands of WP panels that have NM cable fed into the box either thru the back of the box or sleeved up in a piece of 2" PVC. It has been done this way for years and now they tell us it is No Good. So throw away those outdoor panels unless you want to use a JB and splice all your homeruns.
There needs to be a better explanation or perhaps an exception for these scenarios.