bjp_ne_elec
Senior Member
- Location
- Southern NH
This one is something I always struggle with. Go in to an older house and find the originally installed circuits contain Romex with no ground wire. Then I get in to some re-work and find grounded receptacles popped in on non-grounded circuits, with no GFCI and no labeling that there is "No Ground Conductor" installed This is illegal, per the NEC.
Now I'll run an example by the gang here, and see what the feedback is. There is a circuit with ungrounded Romex, and the owner wants three of the receptacles to be replaced, and would like them grounded. Can you legitimately disconnect those three runs, out of their corresponding junction boxes, and just run new grounded Romex to them. The thing I struggle with here, is the situation calls for getting in several junction boxes that are generally metal, and the Romex is ungrounded. By going in to the JB to nip the piece you're going to disconnect, is this in violation of the code. The rest of the circuit remains as it did before you started - except you've disconnected a non-grounded circuit that branched off from this JB - which is metal 9 times out of 10.
Thanks,
Brett
Now I'll run an example by the gang here, and see what the feedback is. There is a circuit with ungrounded Romex, and the owner wants three of the receptacles to be replaced, and would like them grounded. Can you legitimately disconnect those three runs, out of their corresponding junction boxes, and just run new grounded Romex to them. The thing I struggle with here, is the situation calls for getting in several junction boxes that are generally metal, and the Romex is ungrounded. By going in to the JB to nip the piece you're going to disconnect, is this in violation of the code. The rest of the circuit remains as it did before you started - except you've disconnected a non-grounded circuit that branched off from this JB - which is metal 9 times out of 10.
Thanks,
Brett
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