I have been reading up on this and I am very confused about the correct way to run various types of cables/wires to a load center. To clarify:
- This is a surface mount load center
- It is mounted in an unfinished basement, in compliance with the NEC 6 ft rule.
With that in mind, how do you route NM cable from the ceiling cavity into the panel? To clarify further:
- Can the NM cable, as is, be stapled on the plywood within 12” of the load center but be unprotected?
- Can the NM cable sleeved via schedule 40 PVC, or liquid tight non metallic conduit, or EMT assuming 60% conduit fill requirement is met?
- Given the NEC rule which prohibits sleeving of conduit less than 18” length, how can you sleeve the cables if there isnt 18” of available space? My house is old and the ceiling is 88 inches high. There are other obstacles such as natural gas lines or radon pipes which makes it not possible to have 18” or more conduit.
Lastly, what happens if the cables are not routed to the top of the panel but rather being routed to the knock outs on the side of the panel? All these rules in NEC have clauses that limit them to the “top” of a surface mount panel. There is nothing about side.
For example, say I want to run a 6-3 NM cable to my panel and there are no KOs available at the top. I have to run the cable the entire length of the panel and use one of the KOs at the bottom. Does that run have to be sleeved in conduit?
But hang on, NEC considers schedule 40 pvc, liquid tight non metallic conduit all NOT allowed to be subject to physical damage, so does that mean these conduits are no go and it must be EMT? then why would anyone want to use those as form of conduit?
It looks like as stupid as this might sound, NEC considers NM cable and PVC and liquid tight all equal as far as protection. So you have no choice but to use EMT? But even with EMT, you hit this 18” rule which makes even that impossible.
- This is a surface mount load center
- It is mounted in an unfinished basement, in compliance with the NEC 6 ft rule.
With that in mind, how do you route NM cable from the ceiling cavity into the panel? To clarify further:
- Can the NM cable, as is, be stapled on the plywood within 12” of the load center but be unprotected?
- Can the NM cable sleeved via schedule 40 PVC, or liquid tight non metallic conduit, or EMT assuming 60% conduit fill requirement is met?
- Given the NEC rule which prohibits sleeving of conduit less than 18” length, how can you sleeve the cables if there isnt 18” of available space? My house is old and the ceiling is 88 inches high. There are other obstacles such as natural gas lines or radon pipes which makes it not possible to have 18” or more conduit.
Lastly, what happens if the cables are not routed to the top of the panel but rather being routed to the knock outs on the side of the panel? All these rules in NEC have clauses that limit them to the “top” of a surface mount panel. There is nothing about side.
For example, say I want to run a 6-3 NM cable to my panel and there are no KOs available at the top. I have to run the cable the entire length of the panel and use one of the KOs at the bottom. Does that run have to be sleeved in conduit?
But hang on, NEC considers schedule 40 pvc, liquid tight non metallic conduit all NOT allowed to be subject to physical damage, so does that mean these conduits are no go and it must be EMT? then why would anyone want to use those as form of conduit?
It looks like as stupid as this might sound, NEC considers NM cable and PVC and liquid tight all equal as far as protection. So you have no choice but to use EMT? But even with EMT, you hit this 18” rule which makes even that impossible.