That’s the one on Enterprise heading up to the Catholic Church?
Seems only appropriate....
Dad
Are we there yet?
What about now?
Yup, that’s the one I thought it was, just dating myself. That street was Enterprise until the city renamed it about 10-15 years ago! I am old!Butler Ave/Ponderosa Pkwy and 66. I get off at the Little America exit when I go to their place.
Dad.....
I have to pee







I don't know why your telling me, find a tree
We got home yesterday (Saturday) at about 10am. I told you it was a cannonball!!
Wait....we?
You made that trip in that time frame with more than just the mouse in your pocket? That's impressive!
You've got blocking, what I'm guessing is the right size wire, connections made in a box, staples on the romex and clamp connections at the box instead of just sticking it thru the punch out...doesn't look bad! Honestly not sure if that run from box to heater by code should be a MC/armor cable whip or similar, but I'd have no issues calling it done for a barn at my place

As I understand it (and not an electrical code expert)....
There is no set height in the NEC for what is considered "protected" vs "unprotected" when it comes to exposed romex. Various areas/state may have different rules of X heigh above walls or finished ceilings, but those are also generally specific to dwellings. Barns and other non-dwellings are far more gray area in terms of what's required vs allowed or what's good practice vs not.
If it was mine, I'd have 0 concerns with that romex running from box back to wall and as long as it's high enough to not be a hazard for hitting it or animals reaching wouldn't be personally concerned with that run from box to heater. That appliance to box connection is just often done with flexible conduit but that's also dependent on amperage
Romex in conduit isn't expressly against the rules in the NEC to my knowledge, you just have to ensure the conduit is large enough. Around here it's really common to see in barns, pole barns etc with unfinished walls to have boxes mounted on the posts or blocking at normal height, then 3/4" or 1" EMT going up from those to 8' or so up and the romex exiting the conduit there. Helps provide protection to the wiring at the lower heights, then it's just run along blocking/purlin and stapled as required where it's not in danger of being hit

I was under the impression / thought (there is my first mistake, thinking haha) that Romex was not allowed to be in conduit, it had to be THHN solid wire. So I guess if you took the Romex jacket off and just ran each individual wire that would be "better" than snaking the whole Romex assembly?. But is the wire inside Romex specifically THHN or is the shielding different?
It's not in a place or position to really be snagged or touched so this point I'm just trying to update my brain database lol.
In other related matters I got my clearance rack hose reel up. Now my hose will stay nice and warm too and I can just pop it through my dust collector door when I need to fill water troughs. Quick connect on the spigot side to make disconnecting easy. I don't like to leave things plugged in when not I use.
This was brought on by the "animal sitter" left the hose stretched out in the back of the barn not drained and it froze solid. Took my two days to get it unthawed. This is what prompted this whole heater business. I was very excited to snag that heater on sale at Menards for $79 bucks though!!
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Romex has to be protected but since there is no definition of protected it's up to the installer and/or AHJ to decide if it is or not. It can be in conduit, but the jacket has to stay on.
My youngest was convinced it was ice cream. I guess spray foam just looks like it tastes good
Marshmallow in a can.
I just used two cans in the cabin to seal up where I joined the porch roof to the front wall. Half of it wound up on the floor!
Yes it is messy and sticky as hell! When they say we're gloves they mean it! I had a drip that was about to fall on the floor and grabbed it, sticky for days no matter what I washed with.
sticky for days no matter what I washed with.



Assuming those have the same lip on the back as Akro bins, lot of options on this thread
Alternative Rail for Akro-bins
Hi, I'm new to the forum and have been reading for a few days. Thanks for all the info posted here. I recently picked up some inexpensive Akro-bins. Now I would like to do a wall mount system but don't want to pay the $5.50/LF for the commercial rails. What is an alternative rail that is...www.garagejournal.com
I personally have done the u shape shelf standards on a 1x before...easy and available at any hardware store. There are some z clip hanging extrusions that can work as well. Have also seen some flat like 1/16" steel mounted with standoffs to give a lip to hook the bin on if you want to drill holes in metal
Some great ideas there, thanks!
I started following some links and post #1 here is super clean and sounds like what you did.
My Akro type bin solution - homemade mount track
So I know everyone here loves the Akro type bins. I am no exception. In my previous garage I had them all over the place, wherever I could find room. Some were hung with factory plastic track and some on homemade metal rack. I even had a bunch of bins that weren't in use due to lack of space...www.garagejournal.com
