
This is a problem nobody had ever, too many outlets....![]()
Thanks for all the helpful advice everyone. The one thing that this shows me is there is really no concensus!
I have one outlet in the roof already (also currently unfinished) that the garage door unit plugs into. Maybe a roof reel would be a good idea given what everyone has said here. I'll then line the 18' wall with 4 additional outlets at 48-50" high, bringing me up to 5 along that wall. The back wall has a dualplug outlet which is fine. The other wall has 2 outlets + the 220V, so I think I'll have the outlets covered.
Next question will be lighting!!
As always, thanks for all the help here.
M.
If I could do it again I would have run conduit and wire under my slab and had flush outlets available in my main work area.
I have a few reels and i use them most of the time but then it's in the way and I can't stand electrical cord(s) on the ground to all the machines
In ground would have been so nice. And not that difficult either.
Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
Man I so wish I had done it. I cant believe I dont see it recommended more often. I will certainly start mentioning.That's exactly what I did in the woodshop half of the garage. I ran 3/4 EMT from the panel to roughly the center of the slab and stubbed it up for the table saw. Also put in a 30A twist-lock receptacle for the Jointer when I elect to roll that out. Also well as two duplex receptacles for 120V as the outfeed table for the saw tends to turn into an assembly bench in my small shop. Of course, now that most of the hand tools are cordless, that is rarely used.
Glad I did it - the table saw had a nice 30A disconnect on the side so I can be certain that the saw is powered off when changing the blade.
If the next owner of the property doesn't like the stub up there, they can always saw it off after pulling the wires out.
I'm talking about the guys that think about it before hand -- I have been in so many .. it looks like they are planning on a prodcution facility. With a ring of outlets 4' apart all around a 3 car garage ... IMO more in not better ... they get in the way. Smart placement is better
My wife is the second way. It bugs her that the shower head is offset 1 inch from the floor drain in one of our showers. She won't stand 1 inch closer to the wall to use it, it bothers her so much. So, she will not use that shower and wants me to tear down the wall, rebuild it, replumb the shower, to move it over that inch. She used to want me to eliminate all the outlets we didn't use in the house, as it bothered her to see outlets we weren't using. When we remodeled, she wanted to figure out exactly where every lamp and item we were going to use was going to be and just put in outlets there. I've always held firm on the outlet every 4 to 6 feet, everywhere, with some moving them around to areas where it made sense to be closer to the point of use.

