calvin1010
New member
Can you use a white colored wire as a switch leg to a light fixture? seems to me there would end up being two white wires .can't find it in the code book.I know it's in there
You lost me on that one. Sounds backwards.Rule of thumb - Down on white, Back on black.
Rule of thumb -
Down on white, Back on black.
Poet, and don't know it![]()
You lost me on that one. Sounds backwards.
(Also a poet, but I prefer free verse. :grin: )
You lost me on that one. Sounds backwards.
(Also a poet, but I prefer free verse. :grin: )
Nooooo! Not grounded, just white.Feed the switch with the grounded . . .
Reading the 2008 NEC, I don't agree with the idea that 200.7(C)(2) is a restriction on 200.7(C)(1). My take is that 200.7(C)(2) is an obsolete paragraph, since the permission it currently gives is a subset of the broader permission in 200.7(C)(1). I believe the history of the two paragraphs bears that out: if I recall correctly, at one point 200.7(C)(2) allowed a use without reidentifying, while 200.7(C)(1) always required reidentifying.
Of course, my reading of 200.7(C) is based on the idea that the list (1)-(3) is a set of alternatives, i.e. a logical OR. You could read the list as a set of requirements, all of which must be satisfied, i.e. a logical AND. But my understanding is that for this situation, the NEC will use terminology like "all of the following". That language is not present in 200.7(C).
Cheers, Wayne
Charlie?s Rule of Technical Reading
It doesn?t say what you think it says, nor what you remember it to have said, nor what you were told that it says, and certainly not what you want it to say, and if by chance you are its author, it doesn?t say what you intended it to say. Then what does it say? It says what it says. So if you want to know what it says, stop trying to remember what it says, and don?t ask anyone else. Go back and read it, and pay attention as though you were reading it for the first time.
Copyright ? 2005, Charles E. Beck, P.E., Seattle, WA
Ok, what if it isn't a 3 or 4-way switch (I didn't see anything claiming it was)?
200.7(C)(2) starts off "Where a cable assembly contains an insulated conductor for single-pole, 3-way or 4-way switch loops . . ." Single-pole here means 2-way, so this covers all switch loops.