76nemo
Senior Member
- Location
- Ogdensburg, NY
So you're one of those guys who "ropes" a house with all #12, I see.
![]()
When I am not the one bidding or buying, yep, it's 12 for me.
So you're one of those guys who "ropes" a house with all #12, I see.
![]()
When I am not the one bidding or buying, yep, it's 12 for me.
All? Even for kitchen receptacles? How about A/C's with MCA's above 25?I think all #12 in a dwelling unit is a complete waste of money.
Larry ,...I think ne meant all ,.. as in encompassing all the wiring pertaining to a dwelling ,
How about A/C's with MCA's above 25?
In that case I use parallel runs of #12![]()
Or even #11 if you can get it.![]()
it could be made, our POCO has 9, 7, 5 awg's made for them, I was told it was to stop theft? not sure but if it shows up in a scrap yard, they know![]()
it could be made, our POCO has 9, 7, 5 awg's made for them, I was told it was to stop theft? not sure but if it shows up in a scrap yard, they know![]()
One of our POCO's requires the use of a 10 point meter cable that's made up of 10-#9 AWG conductors. Try to buy that at home depot.![]()
I don't buy the whole "looks messy" thing - it just sounds like "we don't do it that way" to me. I see merit in leaving the cable sheath intact inside the enclosure in order to explicitly maintain the relationship between the conductors of the circuit as close as is reasonable to their termination points, and prevent them from becoming indistinguishable from the other 40 circuits that ultimately get "jammed" in there. It also helps to reduce the "tangle" of all those free conductors that tends to occur as they are seemingly randomly routed around the enclosure.
Anyone have non-aesthetic objections to leaving the sheath intact inside the enclosure?
This is why I kept an open mind and closed mouth till I saw a pic. It doesn't look bad at all and certainly a lot better than some of the clusters I have had to sort out.
[/IMG]![]()
Upside down.
Like these?It also helps to reduce the "tangle" of all those free conductors that tends to occur as they are seemingly randomly routed around the enclosure.
Oh, like that? :roll:We strip at the connector, but we also leave a short piece of sheathing with what the circuit feeds hanging on the hot at the breaker, makes panel marking so much easier![]()
Aren't the main and majority of the breakers GE?