Funny how everyone from Chicagoland LOVES EMT, and touts it as the best thing going, and that NM is garbage and no easier to work with, yet the rest of the country knows that it is a joke to run ALL conduit in pretty much any home, and that it is union mandated totalitarian overkill.
I've heard every reason to love conduit, and to hate cable. I have yet to be convinced even a little that conduit is that much better.
"The wire was hard to get into the boxes and you had to ground every device."???? That has to be one of the funniest ones yet.
Since your profile states that you are an electrical contractor (as am I), I will give you the benefit if the doubt that you have some knowledge of electrical installations.
The remodel I did was a kitchen. You have 12 ga. solid wiring and multiple circuits. This kitchen I ran 2 small appliance, fridge, microwave/stove, dishwasher and disposal on one. That's 5 circuits.
Lets assume 50' from panel
You need 2 x romex wires. 12-2 @ .22/ft, 12-3 @ .42/ft
$32 in wire.
$5 in stud plates?
$2-5 for wire straps
THHN @ .09/ft
conduit w fittings@ .20/ft
$31 in wire
$10 conduit.
Material is almost identical.
Labor- Both need holes drilled. Conduit goes in quick when you are proficient at it.
Once the conduit is in, one person can pull the wire and you are done.
Romex is a pain pulling one person. Plus if you have to turn corners or pull multiple wires it gets tangled and knotted going through the stud holes. Then you need to double back and nail strap the studs and staple/strap the wires. You are going back 3 times after you make your hole.
Once the wire is in the box with thhn, there is less splicing and terminating. My comment about fitting the wires in the box, it's legit.
2 small appliance circuits, you have 3 wires with thhn. You might have to splice a neutral and a hot, while the other hot blasts right on through. You don't have that luxury with romex. You need to splice all 4 wires. Then you need have a pile of 12ga **** in a box.
4 splices vs 2.
3 wires to terminate vs 2 on a device.
You need to cut the outer jacket and trim the wire vs just trimming the wire.
It's all time and more processes.
What happens when someone wants to add to the house? Pull another circuit or switch a light from another place? What do you do when you have complex setups like 4x3way switches in one box going to different lights? Sounds like a rats nest of wires and trying to ID them is a pain.
What happens if the wire breaks in the wall or gets too short from years of remodeling and you cant get a device on it? You can't just repull the wire. What about a remodel where you can just intercept a conduit and repull the circuit.
Codes are constantly changing. Devices are constantly changing. Conduit really lets people have more options. What are you romex guys going to do when arc fault circuits start taking off by you? It's now an NEC code to have just about every circuit in a house an arc fault. You can't share neutrals so the 14-3 wire is useless and you are now forced to run a bunch of 14-2 cables instead.
Romex works and is just as safe as conduit, but at the end of the day I doubt price difference is more than 5% in either direction. Obviously someone who doesn't work with conduit or thhn on a daily basis will take longer than if they are familiar with romex.
No one needs 500 hp in a car, but you know what, it sure is fun and I rather have it and not need it then need it and not have it
