Gray wire is typically used for "high voltage" (277v/480v) neutral wiring, to differentiate it from 120v/240v/208v neutral wiring.
Should be fine to use as a neutral in a house. Even in commercial buildings, the white/gray convention isn't kept very strictly, especially when most 277v lighting is wired with black/white/green MC cable..
Gray wire is typically used for "high voltage" (277v/480v) neutral wiring, to differentiate it from 120v/240v/208v neutral wiring.
Should be fine to use as a neutral in a house. Even in commercial buildings, the white/gray convention isn't kept very strictly, especially when most 277v lighting is wired with black/white/green MC cable..




Never seen stranded used for house wiring
Wrap the ends with the appropriate colored tape found in the electrical aisle.
Legally anything 600 volts and under is considered low voltage.
277 sure feels like high voltage when it grabs a hold of you![]()
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Never seen stranded used for house wiring
OP didn't really say it was for a house
Solid is cheaper to run in pipe,stranded is a lot easier to pull though.Never seen stranded used for house wiring
Exactly!277 sure feels like high voltage when it grabs a hold of you![]()
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