MTW
Well-known member
In an earlier thread about CONDUIT , posters were discussing the preferences and merits of when to use conduit (EMT) in their projects. The pro's and cons, when to use it and when it's overkill, costs and benefits, skill levels and tooling. The original posters question didn't start with what type of structure was really in question, and the thread wandered from garages and houses to 2500A industrial services. So I got to thinking about the thread, the electrical forum and many of the posters here, asking the same type questions repeatedly, how to wire or mount something.
And the answer usually really “depends” on circumstances involved, no two are usually the same, especially when it comes to rehab work.
Location, property type, climate, intended use, existing conditions, NEC, regional codes, utility co rules, AHJ interpretation, local code amendments, engineering specifications, customer type, time schedule, local available materials, skill level of the installer, available tooling, weather conditions, before you even mention the budget....So you can see why it “depends” and that virtually every case is usually different.
I don't start many threads here, but I thought one that applies to residential property electrical remodeling, rehab and installation methods and materials would be appropriate, maybe as a sticky, if the moderator here sees fit. I'm a licensed sparky and don't do much residential work so my photo collection of residential work is limited. My thinking is that a annotated picture thread, a slide show, if you will, of the METHODS & MATERIALS, DO'S & DONT'S would be a great resource for do it yourself folks here, and into the future. Because most people do better with a visual lesson than a resuscitation of the relevant code section and it's interpretation. I learned a long time ago from an excellent mentor, also a local AHJ, that the “intent” of the code is really the issue, not the code verbiage itself. If you learn about why the rule was created , it's history and the issues it solves or protects against, then the verbiage is just that
I would like to ask contributors to the thread, to make your slide show have before and after slides, or just after if there was no before. It will take a bit of work compiling, composing, uploading and posting a good thread, but the participants to the forum, especially the lurkers, should benefit immensity, if done correctly.
MTW Ω
And the answer usually really “depends” on circumstances involved, no two are usually the same, especially when it comes to rehab work.
Location, property type, climate, intended use, existing conditions, NEC, regional codes, utility co rules, AHJ interpretation, local code amendments, engineering specifications, customer type, time schedule, local available materials, skill level of the installer, available tooling, weather conditions, before you even mention the budget....So you can see why it “depends” and that virtually every case is usually different.
I don't start many threads here, but I thought one that applies to residential property electrical remodeling, rehab and installation methods and materials would be appropriate, maybe as a sticky, if the moderator here sees fit. I'm a licensed sparky and don't do much residential work so my photo collection of residential work is limited. My thinking is that a annotated picture thread, a slide show, if you will, of the METHODS & MATERIALS, DO'S & DONT'S would be a great resource for do it yourself folks here, and into the future. Because most people do better with a visual lesson than a resuscitation of the relevant code section and it's interpretation. I learned a long time ago from an excellent mentor, also a local AHJ, that the “intent” of the code is really the issue, not the code verbiage itself. If you learn about why the rule was created , it's history and the issues it solves or protects against, then the verbiage is just that
I would like to ask contributors to the thread, to make your slide show have before and after slides, or just after if there was no before. It will take a bit of work compiling, composing, uploading and posting a good thread, but the participants to the forum, especially the lurkers, should benefit immensity, if done correctly.
MTW Ω

