BD1
Well-known member
Curious, if the romex is in the pvc why is it wrong ? It is buried but it is in
pvc ?
pvc ?


Curious, if the romex is in the pvc why is it wrong ? It is buried but it is in
pvc ?![]()
Got it. I know THHN and THWN is suitable for wet locations. I never looked at the basic romex. I guess moisture will penetration it unless it is the
direct burial type. thanks
Good information here guys, thanks very much! I just got off the horn with the local electrical supply store here and was convinced that some #4 6/3 with ground direct burial aluminum cable would work just fine.
So if I go with that, drop some sand in the trench and buy some schedule 80 plastic parts to for the above ground stuff I should be ok, right?
One last thing... there's a driveway invovled here and while it's dirt now it will be concrete later. Does code say I need a stretch of conduit here? If yes I assume I could just reuse a stretch of the 1" stuff I have now.
First off your panel is fine it is only a six circuit so you do not need a Main breaker panel.
You will be driving a ground rod at the garage no problem there.
PRH44 - I like hearing the panel I have is fine, but I'm bringing in two hots, a neutral and a ground, there's only three lugs in the panel and I understand I cannot connect the neutral and ground together in a subpanel. If I connect one wire per lug then do I just need to go buy a little grounding bar and screw that into the panel?
Originally Posted by scott45
Good information here guys, thanks very much! I just got off the horn with the local electrical supply store here and was convinced that some #4 6/3 with ground direct burial aluminum cable would work just fine.
So if I go with that, drop some sand in the trench and buy some schedule 80 plastic parts to for the above ground stuff I should be ok, right?
One last thing... there's a driveway invovled here and while it's dirt now it will be concrete later. Does code say I need a stretch of conduit here? If yes I assume I could just reuse a stretch of the 1" stuff I have now.
pattenp is correct conduit is not required however it would be a good idea. Either way just be sure you are at least 18" below finished grade of the driveway.
The required depth is not the same either way. If you don't use conduit you should bury the cable 24 inches, in PVC conduit 18 inches, under at least 2" of concrete is 18" and 12" respectively.
I talked to the inspector himself and he told me to cover up the trench after I dropped the cable in so sounds like he's not too worried about how deep my wire is. Right near the garage where all those bends are there's a big 'ole piece of rock that's about 8" below current grade and my pickaxe just bounces off of it. Not much I can do there.
So I went out and got 100' of #4 aluminum direct burial cable and managed to put most of it into the conduit I already have. Seemed a shame to waste it since I had it. My only question at this point is what the NEC or general best practice says about bringing the wire in from the outside, up through the wall stud cavity and into the bottom of the sub panel.
Here's the pic again with the NM-B wire and it shows the path the aluminum cable feels like it wants to take but I'm not sure if the winding S-curve will pass inspection. It will be attached to the wall in two places no more than 8 inches from the panel and where it comes into the wall... I'm just not sure if I need to make the cable take a vertical path to the sub panel or if a serpentine route is ok. Keep in mind I'm using #4 aluminum so it doesn't bend like copper does.
Thanks!
pattenp he would fall under 2011 NEC table 300.5 5th row
"One- and two-family dwelling
driveways and outdoor
parking areas, and used only
for dwelling-related purposes"
he is also non GFCI and over 20 amp OCPD
thus requiring 18" for PVC conduit.
What type cable did you end up purchasing ? What is the letter designation on the wire its self?
Here's what the cable says:
Southwire (UL) AWG 4AL TYPE USE-2 60 MILS XLP Insulation 600V
It's 3 4ga aluminum wires loosely twisted together.
You are correct. That's what I get for thinking my memory is correct without checking the book first.
Originally Posted by PRH44
pattenp is correct conduit is not required however it would be a good idea. Either way just be sure you are at least 18" below finished grade of the driveway.
Let's say I find myself 2 feet short with the aluminum feeder and don't have enough to get to my main panel in the house. I've got a funny feeling but haven't confirmed it yet. Funny, because I cut off almost 3 feet in the garage after thinking I had plenty on the other end.
Since I've got all this extra NM-B laying around, would there be any major issue with using a j-box under the house and running my copper into my panel instead of my aluminum?
I would of course be using that grease stuff where the different metals touched.
However, the NM-B I believe you have is way too small, I would just buy a little extra aluminum since it's so cheap by the foot and available by the foot and splice it in the jbox if necessary.
I appreciate the input Aceman but my labor is free and I can count on exactly two fingers the number of times I've hired a contractor and DIDN'T say to myself afterwards, "I could have done that better AND cheaper." Once was the roof on this garage project and the other was when I hired a local flooring company to put down a kitchen floor for me.
A guy can pick any two - done fast, done right or done cheap. I'd wager most of us on this forum would go for the latter two, that's why we're here.![]()