dustindpc said:Hey guys,
Please give me an article that describes requirement for "pig tailing" cables passing through a box before connecting to a receptacle. Thanks
iwire said:The NEC never requires pig-tailing the ungrounded conductors
The NEC always requires pig-tailing the grounding conductor 250.148(B) 2005
The NEC sometimes requires pig-tailing the grounded conductor. 300.13(B) 2005
electricmanscott said:I have never seen a requirement to pigtail cables in any case.
raider1 said:Well said, I don't think I have heard it put so simply before.![]()
iwire said:Thanks Chris. :smile: I have really been trying to go the 'less is more' route.
Do you remember the late Bennie Palmer?
He could sometimes convey more information in a single sentence then many of us can in a long paragraph.![]()
raider1 said:so I usually just ramble on with my posts.
The NEC never requires pig-tailing the grounding conductor. 250.148(B) 2005.iwire said:The NEC always requires pig-tailing the grounding conductor 250.148(B) 2005
The NEC never requires pig-tailing the grounded conductor. 300.13(B) 2005.iwire said:The NEC sometimes requires pig-tailing the grounded conductor. 300.13(B) 2005
charlie b said:Sorry, Bob, but I don’t agree.
And then a BBQ!!buddhakii said:slap some grease on it and we can have a race:smile:
charlie b said:I offered this same opinion on another thread. See post #14:
http://forums.mikeholt.com/showthread.php?p=775478#post775478
charlie b said:insulation stripped off a half inch or so of wire in the middle of the run, the bare wire bent into a semi-circle, and that semi-circle of wire placed under the screw on the side of the receptacle.
I often will use this method. I never thought about what it is called. If we don't call it "pigtailing" what is it called?
iwire said:No need to be sorry, your entitled to be mistaken. :grin:
Do you have an official definition of pigtail?
It happens the very method I have come up with to comply with those code sections without using a wire nut I also call a pigtail. :wink:
How about 'looping'? I almost never do it with one exception: the EGC in a box with multiple switches. I use one long bare that loops from switch to switch.Dave_B said:I often will use this method. I never thought about what it is called. If we don't call it "pigtailing" what is it called?
iwire said:The NEC sometimes requires pig-tailing the grounded conductor. 300.13(B) 2005
SmithBuilt said:Bob why do you use the word "sometimes".
It appears to me you would have to "pigtail" or "loop" as Charlie described in order to meet 300.13(B) 2005. Are there other methods?
Tim