smokey0810
Well-known member
Mounting two lights on the outside of our garage. No easy access to run the romex thru the drywall to the switch I had posted earlier. Thoughts on how to run this romex to said switch?
I second your suggestion. Definitely worthwhile to avoid having exposed conduit or a raceway on the walls.I can't think of a better place to practice your drywall finishing skills than the garage walls. I'd open the wall, run the wires, close up the wall and start taping. Only difficult thing is it may be textured which would be a hard stop for me, my walls are all smooth. With a little practice my finishing is better than the guys that did the house but I would not want to do an entire house!
You can use conduit to sleeve NMB / romex in finished spaces / where subject to damage, but you can't run NMB in complete conduit runs. If there is conduit between 2 boxes / junction points, you must use THHN, but if you are simply using the conduit as a protective sleeve, you are permitted to use NMB.Romex can go in conduit and doesn't require it for the entire run, like thhn.
Do you have a code reference for that?You can use conduit to sleeve NMB / romex in finished spaces / where subject to damage, but you can't run NMB in complete conduit runs. If there is conduit between 2 boxes / junction points, you must use THHN, but if you are simply using the conduit as a protective sleeve, you are permitted to use NMB.
There is no code reference because it is legal but there is a lot of gotcha’s.Do you have a code reference for that?
There are lots of internet rumors and opinions on NM-B in conduit, but I don't know if I have ever seen something prohibiting what you are referring to. It would be great to have something solid to refer to
I get both of those, for sure. But the specific issue noted was complete conduit runs, which I don't believe a prohibition exists for.There is no code reference because it is legal but there is a lot of gotcha’s.
The raceway does NOT negate the fact that if installed out doors, underground, or wet locations need wires rated for outdoors, underground, or wet locations. So just because it’s in conduit you can’t use Romex in those three cases which is why many want to use Romex in conduit.
Second gotcha is fill percentage. Over 24” in length fill percentages govern how many conductors you can use. With Romex it’s calculated off the widest dimension of the sheath with a 40 percent fill. This means you can install only one 12-2 Romex cable in a 3/4 raceway. You would have to go to 1” for two.
THHN wires you could however put (15) 12ga conductors in 3/4” EMT.
It doesn't.I get both of those, for sure. But the specific issue noted was complete conduit runs, which I don't believe a prohibition exists for.