I agree. We always run dedicated for exterior receps. Primarily anticipating tools. And we now put all of our GFCI and AFCI protection in the panels for cost and easier homeowner troubleshooting. However I've often wondered how irritated a landscaper or contractor working outside with the doors locked would be if the breaker tripped and they couldn't get inside to reset it.My $0.02, just having finished installing two exterior outlets last week:
There should be a dedicated circuit (or a few if it makes sense) for outdoor receptacles. I prefer to protect them with a GFCI breaker or a blank face GFCI located indoors. When the receptacle needs replacement due to getting damaged by someone yanking the extension cord, the receptacle is cheaper to swap. Keeping the GFCI electronics warm and dry also makes them last longer.
SceneryDriver
JoeNorm is an experienced electrician from Washington. Please look at his past posts.From my experience of this forum, they don't teach the fundamentals of electricity, you may want to google search it or hire a professional, sorry .. to much liability involved.
Joe should update his profile to include his occupation.JoeNorm is an experienced electrician from Washington. Please look at his past posts.
What about the switch for the Christmas lighting?
What ever the customer will pay for, spec house down n dirty, custom gets custom.
Pffff. Holiday lighting switches...........
REAL lektershuns install timers.
Sorry Joe ...JoeNorm is an experienced electrician from Washington. Please look at his past posts.
Sorry Joe, Didn't realize your were an electrician simply asking for input .. Anyhew .. as you mention it does depend on design. In California typically the exterior outlets on new residential work could be 1 circuit, typically a 20 A. supplying either front or back porch or patio areas while feeding through the baths ,usually starting at a garage GFI. I see that design 75% of the time. Or obviously a dedicated circuit is better for future growth of yard lighting, fountains or patio add ons etc ...Should the outdoors receptacles on a residence have dedicated circuits or be pulled off of nearby circuits. I see merits to both.
Which is a problem anyway if it trips from overload and not ground fault protection function.I agree. We always run dedicated for exterior receps. Primarily anticipating tools. And we now put all of our GFCI and AFCI protection in the panels for cost and easier homeowner troubleshooting. However I've often wondered how irritated a landscaper or contractor working outside with the doors locked would be if the breaker tripped and they couldn't get inside to reset it.
Rob
Sometimes I take the outside receptacles off the panel service receptacle. or just give the outside receptacles it’s own circuit.I am asking a preference from experience question here.
Should the outdoors receptacles on a residence have dedicated circuits or be pulled off of nearby circuits. I see merits to both.
Think 2000 square foot home with crawlpace