- Location
- Massachusetts
Under what year code are you? If '08 do they make tamper resistant plug mold?
That guy who posts around here once in a while.![]()
Plugmold would be TR in my house..... I can't bend over far enough to see using my bad eyesight to plug anything in.![]()
Are you saying that all PlugMold is wired with #12?Do they even make plugmold with #14 wire in it?
Why woudn't it? Isn't the wire inside the PlugMold part of the permanent wiring of the premises, and thus would have to be #12 on a 20a circuit? Not the receptacles, but the wire?Would it matter?
Are you saying that all PlugMold is wired with #12?
Well, the majority of responses say #12 throughout, so I guess that makes it a go.click here
Why woudn't it? Isn't the wire inside the PlugMold part of the permanent wiring of the premises, and thus would have to be #12 on a 20a circuit?
The proposal for the 2002 NEC was from a Montana interior designer. She did not want the plug strip to show, it was installed under the top cabinet on the lower lip, making it just above 18". But perhaps she was installing European cabinets.The change in cabinet height over the countertops was instituted due to the european kitchens being installed, they typically have 20 inch heights from countertop, american cabinets were typically 18 inches.
Yes, but requires protecting it at 15a.Keep in mind that even the NEC rates 14 AWG at 20 amps. :smile:
Yes, but requires protecting it at 15a.
That is a darn good point.
I do not know if you can get TR plugmold yet.