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PVC Conduit in basement

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ivsenroute

Senior Member
Location
Florida
I am seeing more and more unfinished basement with PVC conduit running down the cinder or concrete walls with NM cable visible entering at the top to feed down to a metal box mounted on the wall and the NM cable covering is visible where it enters the box.

I always thought that there has to be a transition at the top of the PVC where the NM enters and then at the box there is no place for the NM to be "connected" to the box with a strain relief or internal clamp.

Now that I read the NEC, I don't see where this is a problem.

How do you see it?
 

charlie

Senior Member
Location
Indianapolis
ivsenroute said:
Now that I read the NEC, I don't see where this is a problem.
334.15(C) In Unfinished Basements and Crawl Spaces. . . NM cable installed on the wall of an unfinished basement shall be permitted to be installed in a listed conduit or tubing or shall be protected in accordance with 300.4. Conduit or tubing shall be provided with a suitable insulating bushing or adapter at the point the cable enters the raceway. . .

Sorry, you are required to have something to protect the cable. Also, read the rest of this section. :grin:
 

ivsenroute

Senior Member
Location
Florida
Yes, I was aware of the bushing where it enters but I am more concerned about the fact that there is no way to attach where it enters the receptacle box. But then again a strain relief bushing was never needed for individual wires in conduit anyway.
 

C3PO

Senior Member
Location
Tennessee
I run PVC down block walls into PVC FS boxes all the time here with no bushings at the top. Why would you need a bushing to protect NM cable from PVC conduit? I could see protecting it from EMT or something with sharp edges. (Just my stupid opinion.)
 

peter d

Senior Member
Location
New England
C3PO said:
It is not enforced that way here with PVC anyway.
What do you all do in this situation?

I don't use PVC for wall receptacles in a basement, but if i did I would use a TA with a plastic bushing on it.
 

Dennis Alwon

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Occupation
Retired Electrical Contractor
C3PO said:
It is not enforced that way here with PVC anyway.
What do you all do in this situation?

We just put a pvc coupling on the top. You could use a connector with a bushing but a coupling is rounded and smooth that it is accepted here.
 
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