pauls340
Well-known member
Is it OK to use 12-2 wire with a 15A breaker?
This make absolutely no sense unless they are only using 20A breakers.Yep.....done all the time. The electrical guys I talk to say that is all they use....instead of keeping two types of wire...they keep just the one....the difference in cost is not that much to them.
Now this is just stupid. This prevents them from using a 20A breaker at all. The #12 is simply wasted.I think the exception is when they are running 3-wire...then they will use 14/3.
Oh, I get that.The 3 different electrical guys I talked to recently told me that is what they do....

For a garage I always put in 20A circuits. For the rest of the house 15A will do the job...
This make absolutely no sense unless they are only using 20A breakers.
For a new install, unless you are trying to avoid excessive voltage drop there is NO reason to use a 15A breaker for #12.
Even the kitchen (coffee maker, toaster, 3 roasters, George Foreman, electric griddle, microwave) and bath (hair dryerS, curling ironS) outlets?
There is a perfectly good reason for it - you size the breaker for the load, not for the wire, so putting in a 20A breaker when you should have in a 15A could lead to issues.
There is a perfectly good reason for it - you size the breaker for the load, not for the wire, so putting in a 20A breaker when you should have in a 15A could lead to issues.
Every electrician I know uses nothing but 12 ga partially for the reason ddawg mentions, it doesnt add squat to their cost (they pass it along to you), and if you ever need to upgrade you can without having to replace the wiring. Its simply good practice.
You got that *** backwards.
lg
no neat sig line
About to wire up my garage and im really thinking of running 12/2 wire on a 20 amp breaker for my plugs now
This statement is just not right. Over current protection is sized to protect the wire(circuit). The circuit which is the wire and devices are sized to the load. And there's nothing wrong with having a 20A breaker on #12 wire if the load is less than 15A.
Around here 14/2 is quite common and I use it for ALL lighting circuits/etc. 12/2 is harder to work with, especially in switch boxes with several switches.
I use it by default in all receptacles, but in my experiences 15A is almost always enough for a receptacle circuit where the receptacles/circuits are properly done.
No, he's right... the breaker is sized for the load. The wire is sized to support that load. The point is even if you run #12 for convenience, you shouldn't automatically put a 20A breaker on it... it depends on how you are utilizing it.
What about if it's #8 with a known 15A load? Should you breaker for 15A or 40A? How is it possible the NEC allows 16 gauge extension cords to plug into a 20A circuit?
EVERYTHING is sized based on the anticipated load. You selected the wire size based on what that load would be, right? Wire size is also often sized due to voltage drop and not just ampacity. The reason is breakers protect from fault conditions resulting in overcurrent - which may not be over what the wire can handle, but it can be more than the device(s) on the circuit should be using.
I'm glad you're reading all of that in it. I didn't see the part where he said the wire is sized to the load.
Your last sentence makes no sense - the device on the circuit uses what it uses. The breaker protects the wire, not the device. If the 15A device goes rogue/shorts/etc, the trip will be to protect the wire. If a 1A lamp catches fire at 10A but doesn't create a fault, the 20A breaker on the run cares not.
If you pull #8, might as well breaker at 40A because if you limit it to 20A, the n why did you pull #8 - unless its for voltage drop and nothing else?
What about if it's #8 with a known 15A load? Should you breaker for 15A or 40A? How is it possible the NEC allows 16 gauge extension cords to plug into a 20A circuit?
EVERYTHING is sized based on the anticipated load. You selected the wire size based on what that load would be, right? Wire size is also often sized due to voltage drop and not just ampacity. The reason is breakers protect from fault conditions resulting in overcurrent - which may not be over what the wire can handle, but it can be more than the device(s) on the circuit should be using.
It all comes into play.
What about if it's #8 with a known 15A load? Should you breaker for 15A or 40A? How is it possible the NEC allows 16 gauge extension cords to plug into a 20A circuit?
EVERYTHING is sized based on the anticipated load. You selected the wire size based on what that load would be, right? Wire size is also often sized due to voltage drop and not just ampacity. The reason is breakers protect from fault conditions resulting in overcurrent - which may not be over what the wire can handle, but it can be more than the device(s) on the circuit should be using.
It all comes into play.
The others have already explained that this is wrong.There is a perfectly good reason for it - you size the breaker for the load, not for the wire, so putting in a 20A breaker when you should have in a 15A could lead to issues.
My point is WHY "upgrade"????? If you run #12, use a 20A breaker. The load connected to that #12 DOES NOT CARE if the breaker is a 20 or a 15.Every electrician I know uses nothing but 12 ga partially for the reason ddawg mentions, it doesnt add squat to their cost (they pass it along to you), and if you ever need to upgrade you can without having to replace the wiring. Its simply good practice.
This is just plain dumb.Just had to ask if 14ga is common in other parts of the country today? My area is as backwoods as it gets, but you best not have any new work with 14ga in it.
This was the best answer from the beginning.![]()
The 3 different electrical guys I talked to recently told me that is what they do....
It's not what I did....I ran 14/2 for lighting....and 12/2 for outlets....I'm a cheap ba$tard.....plus the 14/2 is easier to work with....especially up high....
Its generally considered a poor practice to do what you mentioned, but there is nothing per say against it in the code book (at least the 2008 version). The breaker is sized off the anticipated load. The wire is sized off the anticipated load. Do many electricians use 12 gauge in a 15 amp circuit? Absolutely, it's done because of the reasons the guys mentioned but also due to heat distance relations etc. A breaker should never be upsized without absolute knowledge of the entire circuit and the gauge/length and to include the box devices to just just starters. There is so much more to it than what gauge is running into the main panel.Getting back to the OP...I've heard the only place you can NOT use a 12-2 mixed in with 14-2 wiring, is right at the panel.
Long story short, if you used a piece of 12-2 to get to your first device, and then its 14-2 after someone could come along down the road and see that piece of 12-2 and assume the entire run is 12-2 and swap the breaker out to a 20A...which is an issue. So IN the panel it does matter.
No clue if thats covered in code, but made perfect sense to me. PERSONALLY I dont mix and match anything. 14ga-15A for lighting circuits, 12ga-20a for normal receptacles.
It's a waste but there is nothing wrong with it.
How is it possible the NEC allows 16 gauge extension cords to plug into a 20A circuit?
I run 12-2 for everything because I like yellow
I run 12-2 for everything because I like yellow
I'm glad you're reading all of that in it. I didn't see the part where he said the wire is sized to the load.
I gave him the benefit of the doubt.It sounded like how an EE or someone with basic knowledge describes the process and not so much an electrician.
So... why not have 30A and 40A receptacle circuits on larger wire, with receptacles that have a higher pass-through? Because the lower you can reasonably limit the current at the breaker, the less fault current those devices can pull... thus the "safer" things are.
You're an engineer, so I'll speak slowly, over explain things, and use much larger and more complicated words than necessary so you can understand me.
My point is WHY "upgrade"????? If you run #12, use a 20A breaker. The load connected to that #12 DOES NOT CARE if the breaker is a 20 or a 15.
By using 15A breakers on #12 you are simply wasting 5 amps of potential circuit capacity, NOTHING more.
Good practice??? Are you kidding me?My statement that you quoted about "upgrading" referred to oversizing wire to plan for the future possibility of having a larger load, and avoiding the cost/effort to replace wire. I believe you are asking something completely different - why would I install a smaller breaker now and later upgrade to a larger one as necessary if the load grows? ishiboo clarified it earlier, bc its good practice and installing a breaker takes what...5 mins? Just like you, I cannot predict the amperage at which SWMBO's antique lamps, my antique tools, or anything else in our house will catch fire. If I have a 15 amp breaker installed and something wont burn until it hits 18....Ive just prevented myself from starting life over a bit poorer compared to the 20.