USE cable in studs

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Cipisek

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My place is in Upstate NY. I am feeding a sub panel in a new barn with directly buried USE-2 jacketed cable about 100 feet away from the main house. The cable is mechanically protected through the concrete pad and into the frame by a steel conduit. It then continues through six true 2"x 6" studs to the 100 A subpanel. Before I call an inspector, I would like to know if the 2015 edition of NEC allows me to run the cable through the studs without any type of conduit. The framing will be eventually covered by fiberglass faced sheetrock so that no part of the cable will be exposed. I am told that the inspector will honor NEC 2015 interpretation.
 
I am closing this thread in accordance with the forum rules. If the question has to do with performing installation work at your own home, as it appears to be, then forum rules do not allow an engineer (PE or not), to post the question. Actually, it is not very often that we get engineers asking DIY questions. Most of the DIY questions I have seen come from people who have no connection at all with the electrical industry. We tell them the same thing I will now tell you: If installing stuff is not your occupation, then we can’t help you install stuff. You would have had to agree with that rule during the process of registering on the forum.

The reason is that the forum’s owner does not want a person to get an answer to the question they asked, but not get answers to the dozens of other questions they should have asked and were unaware they needed to ask. An EE is less of a risk in that category. But you need to understand that what we learn in college has very little to do with what electricians learn during their apprenticeship. Examples include wiring methods, wire sizes, load limits, conduit types, wire types, supporting of conduit, conduit bend limits, extending existing circuits, GFCI requirements, AFCI requirements, derating requirements, lock-out-tag-out requirements, and post-installation testing methods. We don’t know, and can’t know, how much of this you already understand. Mike doesn’t want anyone to get injured by any incidents related to electrical installations. But he also doesn’t want to be sued by the injured party’s relatives on the basis of him not telling you enough to keep you safe.

I have been involved in the Mike Holt Code Forum for over a dozen years. It has taught me more than I can begin to describe. It is a great resource, and EEs have been a great source of information for the other forum members. So I encourage you to stick around.
 
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