bobinyelm
Well-known member
I am working in Washington State (Thurson County, using WA L&I State Inspection)
I am wiring my shop to my home panel, and for 100 amp service have settled on 2224 alum cable.
I asked my elec inspector, and he told me that to run the cable, it had to be in conduit from my home panel to my shop panel (nowhere exposed except inside the panels) , and that it could not be in a sheath (like Romex), but had to be bare insulated wires. He said I CAN run Romex inside NMC as long as it was for protection only (below 8ft above floor level I have to "protect" the Romex in conduit, run it below structural members, or put it behind other protection).
That would make it type URD cable as far as I can tell? (Question #1)
(I noticed here on the Forum Type SER cable was recommended for this use, but it is sheathed)
Would 1 1/2" non-metallic conduit be appropriate end-to-end? (Question 2)
I know the cable cannot occupy more than 53% of the conduit cross section)
The elec guy at Home Depot said that he thought Sched 40 conduit was OK above ground, but that I should use Sched 80 PVC conduit below ground.
The past job like this (20+ years ago, same jurisdiction) I basically built the conduit around the cable (assembled the conduit OVER the cable, cementing it as I went. This kept me from having to "pull" the wires through the 100ft run and the bends. But, in a thread on this Forum I just read that this is NOT the proper way it should be done. I should assemble the entire conduit, and then pull the cable through it. The poster said that separate conductors should be pulled individually through the conduit as pulling twisted cable through conduit s difficult (the Home Depot guy confirmed pulling 75ft of 2224 through my proposed run would be VERY difficult due to the proposed bends).
Is there a technical reason I should not run the conduit over the cable , cementing as I go? Is it some kid of "code" that wire has to be "pulled?" If so, I have to ask WHY it matters as long as the conduit is safe inside the conduit?
Any and all comments/suggestions welcome.
Thanks-
I am wiring my shop to my home panel, and for 100 amp service have settled on 2224 alum cable.
I asked my elec inspector, and he told me that to run the cable, it had to be in conduit from my home panel to my shop panel (nowhere exposed except inside the panels) , and that it could not be in a sheath (like Romex), but had to be bare insulated wires. He said I CAN run Romex inside NMC as long as it was for protection only (below 8ft above floor level I have to "protect" the Romex in conduit, run it below structural members, or put it behind other protection).
That would make it type URD cable as far as I can tell? (Question #1)
(I noticed here on the Forum Type SER cable was recommended for this use, but it is sheathed)
Would 1 1/2" non-metallic conduit be appropriate end-to-end? (Question 2)
I know the cable cannot occupy more than 53% of the conduit cross section)
The elec guy at Home Depot said that he thought Sched 40 conduit was OK above ground, but that I should use Sched 80 PVC conduit below ground.
The past job like this (20+ years ago, same jurisdiction) I basically built the conduit around the cable (assembled the conduit OVER the cable, cementing it as I went. This kept me from having to "pull" the wires through the 100ft run and the bends. But, in a thread on this Forum I just read that this is NOT the proper way it should be done. I should assemble the entire conduit, and then pull the cable through it. The poster said that separate conductors should be pulled individually through the conduit as pulling twisted cable through conduit s difficult (the Home Depot guy confirmed pulling 75ft of 2224 through my proposed run would be VERY difficult due to the proposed bends).
Is there a technical reason I should not run the conduit over the cable , cementing as I go? Is it some kid of "code" that wire has to be "pulled?" If so, I have to ask WHY it matters as long as the conduit is safe inside the conduit?
Any and all comments/suggestions welcome.
Thanks-
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