To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

The electric shed

G19Tony

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
127
Location
Las Vegas
As part of my Tuff Shed garage project, I'm turning my 8x14 Tuff Shed into my dirty room. The drill press, grinders, media blaster and that kind of stuff with go into it. The first order of business was cleaning it out and putting in electric.

The lights are Philips T8 LED's that drop into a standard T8 fixture.





I've never done much electrical work, but this turned out to be pretty easy. I just took my time.





The shed is plugged into the garage.



I made up an AC tie bus.



I have half a box of Race Deck from the garage. I may only need one more box to finish the floor. I've decided on a Barrel Blaster that I will get on the way in a few weeks.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Vegaman_Dan

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 1, 2012
Messages
2,453
Location
Pacific, WA
With such a short distance between the two buildings, I'd be tempted to run a bit of underground conduit. I did this with my shed and it was surprisingly easy and affordable.

I also put in LED night lights into all the open outlet boxes in the shed for lighting when the overhead is off. I don't know that I'll ever need it, but like the effect.
 

njride

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 1, 2011
Messages
647
Is that a suicide plug? I mean if I walk up to your shed while you're using it and pull that plug out will there be live male terminals In my hand?
 

C96

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2013
Messages
1,251
I've never done much electrical work, but this turned out to be pretty easy.

Yeah, sometimes things seam easy because your doing them wrong.

You’ve got a lot of wrong going on here...:shocking:
 
OP
G

G19Tony

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
127
Location
Las Vegas
Is that a suicide plug? I mean if I walk up to your shed while you're using it and pull that plug out will there be live male terminals In my hand?

I guess you would. But, why would you do that in the first place?
 
OP
G

G19Tony

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
127
Location
Las Vegas
With such a short distance between the two buildings, I'd be tempted to run a bit of underground conduit. I did this with my shed and it was surprisingly easy and affordable.

I also put in LED night lights into all the open outlet boxes in the shed for lighting when the overhead is off. I don't know that I'll ever need it, but like the effect.

I asked the electrician who wired my garage about that. He told me the county would rather have me run a cord. They don't like permanent power to a temporary building.
 

larry4406

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 27, 2006
Messages
19,257
Location
Northern Virginia
Ditch the suicide cord, put a power inlet box on the shed, and use a normal heavy duty cord. I can't believe the County frowns on power to a shed.
 
OP
G

G19Tony

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
127
Location
Las Vegas
Ditch the suicide cord, put a power inlet box on the shed, and use a normal heavy duty cord. I can't believe the County frowns on power to a shed.

I didn't even know they made such a thing. Thanks! :thumbup:

They don't frown on power to a shed, just permanent power. The shed is considered a temporary structure, as it can be moved.
 

er3456df

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2009
Messages
230
Thanks for letting me know. What would the problems be?

Probably nothing you didn't know already. If you're not worried already, don't start now. Just don't forget about the live ends if the jumper cord gets unplugged.

One thing you might not know, is you can have trouble running high-amp loads (compressor?) through a coiled-up cord. The coil will reduce the effective voltage, causing the motor to overheat. If you're running anything stronger than a drill out there, I'd get a shorter cord that will lay straight, otherwise you'd need to uncoil all that extra and stretch it out in the yard.
 

er3456df

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2009
Messages
230
I guess you would. But, why would you do that in the first place?

The real reason is for anyone else who might eventually end up in your yard, who might not know that an "unplugged" cord can shock them. Kids, for example. Anything else in the house, you can unplug it and touch the prongs and nothing happens. This one? Different story.

One way to fix this, without spending a bunch, is to make a short pigtail for the shed, with a male connector on it. That way, if the shed gets unplugged, the male prongs aren't on the live side of the connection.
 

RunninOnEmpty

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 1, 2015
Messages
287
Location
New England
Yeah, if using male and female, the female end needs to be on the source and the male on the load and never the opposite.

There is no logical reason that you would ever need to have a male end on the source.

If someone trips over it, disconnects it, and gets shocked, they will sue you. I do not support frivolous lawsuits (spilled hot coffee on yourself? tripped on ice? F off, your own fault...) and yet I would be on the phone with a lawyer before I even left your yard.
 

C96

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2013
Messages
1,251
Thanks for letting me know. What would the problems be?

Hi G19Tony, well as mentioned, that jumper cord you made is the biggest hazard. That could easily turn into somebody getting seriously hurt.

Also, never use an extension cord while it is still rolled-up. This creates lots of heat and can actually start melting the insulation of the wire without tripping a breaker. Those cord reels are meant for easy return of the cord and storage. When using them you’re supposed to fully unroll the cord first.

Now, you have used MC Cable for the inside wiring, but you failed to use the correct connectors where the cable terminates at the boxes. It appears you have used flex connectors; this of course is wrong and should be replaced. When you purchased the MC it came with anti-short bushings that are to be used at the termination points. The correct connectors allow for the anti-short bushings to be used as designed and held in place. The way you have it, the armor of the cable is not properly connected to the box, but simply free floating, therefore it’s not secure or grounded properly and the anti-short bushings if used will fall out and not protect the wire from abrasion.

Another thing is they need to be GFCI protected. Can’t tell from the picture, but if the receptacle you are plugging into is GFI (as it should be) then your covered.

If you insist on powering up your shed this way, then at least use something like this at the shed with an approved cover applicable for your location:

55-8889_1.jpg
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Vegaman_Dan

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 1, 2012
Messages
2,453
Location
Pacific, WA
Maybe another option would be to go overhead with your temporary cord. Get it above your heads and there won't be a tripping hazard.
 
OP
G

G19Tony

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
127
Location
Las Vegas
Hi G19Tony, well as mentioned, that jumper cord you made is the biggest hazard. That could easily turn into somebody getting seriously hurt.

Also, never use an extension cord while it is still rolled-up. This creates lots of heat and can actually start melting the insulation of the wire without tripping a breaker. Those cord reels are meant for easy return of the cord and storage. When using them you’re supposed to fully unroll the cord first.

Now, you have used MC Cable for the inside wiring, but you failed to use the correct connectors where the cable terminates at the boxes. It appears you have used flex connectors; this of course is wrong and should be replaced. When you purchased the MC it came with anti-short bushings that are to be used at the termination points. The correct connectors allow for the anti-short bushings to be used as designed and held in place. The way you have it, the armor of the cable is not properly connected to the box, but simply free floating, therefore it’s not secure or grounded properly and the anti-short bushings if used will fall out and not protect the wire from abrasion.

Another thing is they need to be GFCI protected. Can’t tell from the picture, but if the receptacle you are plugging into is GFI (as it should be) then your covered.

If you insist on powering up your shed this way, then at least use something like this at the shed with an approved cover applicable for your location:

55-8889_1.jpg

Thanks for the info. I'll get the correct bushings for the switch. I'm plugged into a GCFI outlet from the garage. I just ordered the proper inlet. Thanks for the info.
 
OP
G

G19Tony

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
127
Location
Las Vegas
Thanks for the advice on fixing the mistakes, friends. I picked up the isolator bushings and a male outlet. I also got a shorter cord. I ordered some more racedeck and put in the floor to match the garage.







I'm very pleased with the LED lights.


 

barnjunkie

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 3, 2015
Messages
181
Location
TN
Nice job on the male plug Tony. Much safer for everyone. You may want to go to Lowe's or HD to get someone to help you with the fittings for the switch handy box. It is really not the correct use of these components.

If you are like me, it will take 3 times before you get it right!
 
OP
G

G19Tony

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
127
Location
Las Vegas
Nice job on the male plug Tony. Much safer for everyone. You may want to go to Lowe's or HD to get someone to help you with the fittings for the switch handy box. It is really not the correct use of these components.

If you are like me, it will take 3 times before you get it right!

Would you happen to have a photo of the correct usage? Thanks! :beer:
 

HSpencer

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 28, 2010
Messages
2,854
Location
South Central US
If my shed, which is the exact same size as yours, looked that nice I would be very happy. Your doing a great job on organizing it.

Best Regards
Herb Spencer
 
OP
G

G19Tony

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2014
Messages
127
Location
Las Vegas
Tony:

Tell us a bit about the black canister next to the blast cabinet. It looks like a dust collector. Got any details?

The place look great.

Cheers

Jim

It's the SKAT BLAST dust collector that fits with the cabinet. I've only blasted a couple small items, but it works great. I'm glad I made the investment. Suddenly, I have lots of friends! :D
 

cabfiveforty

Member
Joined
Oct 7, 2014
Messages
24
Location
ABQ
What power inlet did you end up using? I've only been able to find the expensive twist - lock ones locally...
 

1953mercury

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 25, 2012
Messages
701
Location
Steamboat Springs CO
You've done a nice job there and have a lot of good resources in a small convenient space. I live on a small Caribbean island in the winter and if you want to see some really scary wiring you should see some of the stuff here. Even the stuff put up by the so called utility co. Mike
 

Dave88LX

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 25, 2006
Messages
664
Location
York, PA
It's nice to see people take constructive criticism and do good things with it. Good job there!
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom