I have the wire in front of me. It says "Compact Stabiloy AL XLPE 600V USE-2 or RHH or RHW-2"
According to the chart you sent RHH and RHW are both fire retardant.
Am I missing something?
Oh.. come on now. I've seen lots of these in your area.
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So because its fire retardant...does it still need to be in a conduit when run inside?
The fire retardant has nothing to do with the requirement to be in conduit. It has to be in conduit inside because it is considered to be individual conductors. It does not have an overall outer sheathing.

So because its fire retardant...does it still need to be in a conduit when run inside?
Does it drive any other electricians nuts like it does me, with how many different types of cables there are out there? Pattenp? Speedy-pete?
Its gotten too complicated with the # of different cables available! Its complicated enough with all the different temp. grades there are! And there's more than just the standard 3 of 60, 75, 90....
Gotcha...To give you guys credit...I think you may know more about electricity then some true master electricians around here. You know how many people (all electricians) have told me to just get the 2-2-2-4 THHN from Either HD or Lowes and not worry about it from point to point? Heck I know of 3 garages setup that way (all with 100a breakers too BTW) some are not in code enforced areas, but one of them is and the code guy signed off no issue.
I'm not in a code enforced area...I could use bare conductors in individual Conduits if dumb enough to try such a stunt..
No matter which way I go, It will be run point to point...dunno if its more important to have the sheath on it and a bare Ground in the conduit, or separate conductors in the house.
It drives me nuts at times trying to explain it to first time electrical DIY'ers in this forum. But I do enjoy trying to help others with basic electrical.
I guess what confuses me the most is why do they not make a 2-2-2-4 cable rated for direct burial AND be able to be run in a house without conduit....IMO From the bazillion threads on here, seems like it would be a pretty good selling item. Like I mentioned before...one of my friends who built his garage last year has SE-R from his house to garage...yes in conduit. Another friend has MHF from point to point. Both of em are on 100a breakers, but thats another story for another thread..ROFL
Junction boxes are just another point of failure and an eye-sore on a house IMO. Right now about as code compliant as I think I can get would be if I used MHF and found a 6' piece of 2" Liquidtight Flex Conduit. Running ridgid conduit between the last Floor Joist and the Rim Joist is gonna be virtually impossible IMO...
IN the end, I can only speak for myself here, I really do appreciate the help here that everybody has given me.
**Edit** Just thinkin...what minimum conduit size is needed for 2-2-2-4? I will run 2" from the garage panel all the way to the side of the house and then at the LB, if I reduce the back side of the LB to 1.5" I MIGHT be able to get a sweep in there and get the conduit down & into the panel....
just a note from southwire's web site about conduit and water underground.
Southwire
Technical Support
Power Cable Updates
Buried Conduit? Choose Jackets that Resist Moisture
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Buried Conduit? Choose Jackets that Resist Moisture
Water is ubiquitous in buried conduit. Cable jackets can help protect insulation.
Putting cable in buried conduit keeps the cable out of sight, and it's protected mechanically. But there is also a downside to underground conduit: water.
"Water from condensation and ground-water leakage at fittings contribute to high moisture conditions inside buried conduit," says Doug Ramsey, Southwire Electrical Division's vice president for industrial products. "In many installations, underground conduit is full of water most of the time."
Hmm, so reading that, SE-R is out...
Now you guys have me 2nd guessing myself on running the power in Conduit at all.. My ONLY Hesitation without using one is it will be going under a driveway. Not paved right now, but we've always said we'd pave once the garage is done...
'Nuther thing...what counts as conduit...stupid question I'm thinkin...let me cut to the chase...can I run MHF in some 2" ENT?
http://www-public.tnb.com/ps/fulltilt/index.cgi?part=12011500
Thinkin that would be cheapest & easiest....and might satisfy all necessary codes.
SE-R was out for under ground use way back in our discussion. The ENT cannot be used for direct earth burial.
Dave, just dig you a nice clean 24" deep trench, lay the MHF, back fill with clean soil, no rocks. I guarantee that wire will out last you by a long ways. And I don't know if you're 20 or 80.

I would only use ENT inside the house...normal ridgid PVC conduit outside, LB on the house and on the inside of that LB I'd transition to the ENT, come down 4' and be in my main.
No problem there, we own a Bobcat 325 Mini-Ex, so digging 48" isnt a problem either and my ground is very sandy...VERY Sandy. Easiest thing to describe it would be laying cable in at the beach.
I'm 32....so god willing...I hope it goes at least 30 years...LOL..
The HD's in Texas probably carry Mobile Home Feeder since Texas is the Mobile Home capital of the US.![]()

OK, thanks Pattenp. Once again, you have very helpful and I appreciate it greatly. What is the minimum spacing on the ground rods?
I have a roto hammer and a drill with hammer function. Do I just get a nut driver that fits over the ground rod and drive it?
Thanks!