sleek98
Well-known member
I have my permit application in for my electrical runs, and want to run by a couple questions as the desk person doesnt know much and the inspectors are hit and miss. When I did my basement at the last house one guy told me to read the code when I asked a specific question, the other one gave me a work around that he would accept.
Have a few questions that I need to figure out. It looks like we use the NEC 2011 version.
Detached Garage that has its own 200 amp panel that has been inspected and signed off when the builder did the house and garage.
Plan is to run romex through the studs in a 24" high section of the wall 48" to 72" off the floor. The boxes will be at the bottom of the section and then I will cover the romex with plywood or osb.
I am needing to add boxes for 3 220v 30 amp hanging heaters. My thoughts are to run 10/2 romex through the studs then have the romex go into a metal box through a 1/2" knock out, then switch to mc cable to wire into the heater through a flat cover with a knockout. I believe this will get me around needing a GFCI breaker or outlet on these runs since it will be hardwired in and that is the perferred method of the heater manufacture.
Edit: MC cable doesnt meet the physical damage so I will have to switch to emt. Well that *****.
Would also like to confirm that the outlets need a gfci breaker as the first one in each line even if its 48" off the floor? I plan on having 4 lines, one on the east and west wall, and then splitting the back south wall into 2 lines.
I have the ceiling outlets not on a gfci breaker. Its a 20 amp line through 3 switches that control bank A and bank B of lights and then 3 ceiling fans. Those do not need a GFCI breaker since the outlets are on the 12' ceiling.
Thanks
Chris
Have a few questions that I need to figure out. It looks like we use the NEC 2011 version.
Detached Garage that has its own 200 amp panel that has been inspected and signed off when the builder did the house and garage.
Plan is to run romex through the studs in a 24" high section of the wall 48" to 72" off the floor. The boxes will be at the bottom of the section and then I will cover the romex with plywood or osb.
I am needing to add boxes for 3 220v 30 amp hanging heaters. My thoughts are to run 10/2 romex through the studs then have the romex go into a metal box through a 1/2" knock out, then switch to mc cable to wire into the heater through a flat cover with a knockout. I believe this will get me around needing a GFCI breaker or outlet on these runs since it will be hardwired in and that is the perferred method of the heater manufacture.
Edit: MC cable doesnt meet the physical damage so I will have to switch to emt. Well that *****.
Would also like to confirm that the outlets need a gfci breaker as the first one in each line even if its 48" off the floor? I plan on having 4 lines, one on the east and west wall, and then splitting the back south wall into 2 lines.
I have the ceiling outlets not on a gfci breaker. Its a 20 amp line through 3 switches that control bank A and bank B of lights and then 3 ceiling fans. Those do not need a GFCI breaker since the outlets are on the 12' ceiling.
Thanks
Chris
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