aka Larry
Well-known member
My new shop is finally up! Now I'm ready to start on the electrical and I have a few questions. FYI, in the past, I have installed breakers, outlets, switches, etc, but only with Romex, and I'll be using EMT and pulling individual strands in my new shop.
The plan:
For the main feed from the house to the shop I'll be hiring an electrician. I'm planning to use 2-2-2-4 AL MHF inside 1-1/2" conduit. 90A total. Yes, I know it can be direct burial, I want conduit just for extra protection. He will install the panel box in the shop and I will do the rest myself.
I have planned out the circuits to 80% load of the breaker rating. All the 120V outlets will be 20A. The first in the circuit will be a GFCI with the others daisy-chained off of that one.
I'm running (3) separate 240V circuits using #10 THHN wire. One for the air compressor (30A), one for the lift (30A) and one for a future (larger) MIG welder.
I have the chart for maximum wire fill of the EMT so I do know how many conductors I can safely pull.
I bought and EMT bender, but will not be doing offset bends. I'm using the EMT stand-off clips to make it easier on myself.
Now for my questions:
1. Using EMT, the conduit itself can be used as the ground path correct? If so, then for the 120V circuits can I run just two leads and use a grounding tail from each outlet to it's box? The reason I ask is because I'm wondering how the ground bar gets used in the panel box if I don't need a separate ground lead like I would have using Romex.
2. I'm planning to use #12 THHN stranded for the 20A receptacles and lighting circuits. Do you guys just wrap the wires on the screw terminals (like with solid wire) or use crimp-on terminal ends?
3. How far off the floor (per code) minimum do the outlets need to be?
4. Do you guys use those little stick on numbers to keep track of the wires in a particular circuit or do you use another method like with a continuity tester?
5. I don't have a fish tape so I will be buying one. I saw a fiberglass one in Lowes yesterday and thought that would be nice. Good idea or ****? FYI, I will have an outlet every 10 feet around the perimeter so the pulls aren't terribly long, if that matters.
6. Another EMT question, do I *need* to use the lube to pull the wires? It seems like it would just make a mess, but I don't know so I'm asking.
As always, thanks for the help!
The plan:
For the main feed from the house to the shop I'll be hiring an electrician. I'm planning to use 2-2-2-4 AL MHF inside 1-1/2" conduit. 90A total. Yes, I know it can be direct burial, I want conduit just for extra protection. He will install the panel box in the shop and I will do the rest myself.
I have planned out the circuits to 80% load of the breaker rating. All the 120V outlets will be 20A. The first in the circuit will be a GFCI with the others daisy-chained off of that one.
I'm running (3) separate 240V circuits using #10 THHN wire. One for the air compressor (30A), one for the lift (30A) and one for a future (larger) MIG welder.
I have the chart for maximum wire fill of the EMT so I do know how many conductors I can safely pull.
I bought and EMT bender, but will not be doing offset bends. I'm using the EMT stand-off clips to make it easier on myself.
Now for my questions:
1. Using EMT, the conduit itself can be used as the ground path correct? If so, then for the 120V circuits can I run just two leads and use a grounding tail from each outlet to it's box? The reason I ask is because I'm wondering how the ground bar gets used in the panel box if I don't need a separate ground lead like I would have using Romex.
2. I'm planning to use #12 THHN stranded for the 20A receptacles and lighting circuits. Do you guys just wrap the wires on the screw terminals (like with solid wire) or use crimp-on terminal ends?
3. How far off the floor (per code) minimum do the outlets need to be?
4. Do you guys use those little stick on numbers to keep track of the wires in a particular circuit or do you use another method like with a continuity tester?
5. I don't have a fish tape so I will be buying one. I saw a fiberglass one in Lowes yesterday and thought that would be nice. Good idea or ****? FYI, I will have an outlet every 10 feet around the perimeter so the pulls aren't terribly long, if that matters.
6. Another EMT question, do I *need* to use the lube to pull the wires? It seems like it would just make a mess, but I don't know so I'm asking.
As always, thanks for the help!
.....Norcal says you can't and truckn says you can use sta-kons........