Doc13067
Senior Member
- Location
- Bucks County/Philadelphia, PA USA
Hey guys, I have never failed an inspection, but I want to get your take on something. I had a job where a property was condemned because the resident lost his mind and cut a bunch of wires in his electrical panel. The panel was in a closet, but I got a permit to repair it and spoke to the inspector about my plans and got his verbal approval. I repaired the panel by replacing the guts, and the inspector came out and said it looks great, but he noticed the service cable outside had cracks in the sheathing so he couldn’t pass the inside, even though my permit had nothing to do with the service cable and the resident did not do anything to damage the service cable. So now because I have to do a full service I have to move the panel because it can’t be in the closet. So I got the permit for the full service and move it outside of the closet and for all the lines I ran from the old panel to the new panel I ran 12/2 even in cases where the wiring in the old panel is 14/2. I then put 15 amp breakers on all of these branch circuits even though the portion from the new panel to the old panel is upsized.
The inspector then came out and said because I opened the walls. I have to run 20 amp circuits to the kitchen and bathroom. While he was there, I found the kitchen and bathroom circuits in the old panel and they were 12 gauge thankfully so that stopped me from having to run new circuits to the kitchen and bathroom, but he said I was not allowed to have them on the 15 amp breakers because of the requirement for those circuits to be 20 amp, even though I did not run kitchen and bathroom circuits in my job (it was a service replacement). Then he said since my 15 amp breakers for the other circuits are on 12 gauge wires they should be able to go on 20 amp breakers but since they can’t, I need to label all of the wires for 15 amps and put 20 amp breakers on the kitchen and bathroom. Has anyone ever had a problem with sizing conductors? I never would’ve thought it would be a problem. In fact I’ve had to upsize them for accounting for voltage drop and I’ve even had engineers required them to be upsized in certain cases. I’m just sort of baffled Than. I would like to understand the logic.
The inspector then came out and said because I opened the walls. I have to run 20 amp circuits to the kitchen and bathroom. While he was there, I found the kitchen and bathroom circuits in the old panel and they were 12 gauge thankfully so that stopped me from having to run new circuits to the kitchen and bathroom, but he said I was not allowed to have them on the 15 amp breakers because of the requirement for those circuits to be 20 amp, even though I did not run kitchen and bathroom circuits in my job (it was a service replacement). Then he said since my 15 amp breakers for the other circuits are on 12 gauge wires they should be able to go on 20 amp breakers but since they can’t, I need to label all of the wires for 15 amps and put 20 amp breakers on the kitchen and bathroom. Has anyone ever had a problem with sizing conductors? I never would’ve thought it would be a problem. In fact I’ve had to upsize them for accounting for voltage drop and I’ve even had engineers required them to be upsized in certain cases. I’m just sort of baffled Than. I would like to understand the logic.