Should You Be ONLY Using 12/2? When Can You Use 14/2?

  Рет қаралды 324,085

Electrician U

Electrician U

Жыл бұрын

Join this channel to get access to perks:
/ @electricianu
When it comes to using NM cable to wire a house, there are 2 general camps that contractors fall into. Those that wire the house in 14/2 and those that will wire the house entirely in 12/2. But which is the correct way to do it? In today’s episode of Electrician U, Dustin dives into this topic and gives us some explanations and tips on doing it correctly.
🤘⚡️MEMBERSHIP⚡️🤘
JOIN ELECTRICIAN U - become a member and get:
FREE Continuing Education every year
FREE Practice Exams
FREE Monthly Video Courses
FREE Weekly Live Instructor-Led Classes
FREE Monthly Educational Newsletter
Premium Members-Only Content
Private Discord Channel
Monthly Members-Only Discord Chats
Sign up here --- www.electricianu.com/electric...
🎧🎹MUSIC AND VIDEO:🎹🎧
/ descantmv
🎬✍️ART AND ILLUSTRATION:✍️🎬
www.daverussoart.com
So, the initial response to this question is to check with your Local AHJ (electrical inspector) to find out their requirements and the requirements of the jurisdiction you are working in. The inspector will have the final say of what they are willing to inspect. The current electrical code (2023 NEC is the most recent, however, many jurisdictions are still using the 2020 NEC) is also a resource to be referenced. Articles 240.4, 210.21 and 310.16 are great articles governing circuitry and wire sizing. Something to keep in mind is that type NM cable falls under the 60-degree rating, and not the 75-degree rating used in most commercial wiring.
The next, and most practical, explanation of what to use to wire a house would be the circuitry type itself. In recent discussions on Electrician U, we have covered Series wiring and Parallel wiring. From those discussions, we have deduced that (for amperage) on a series circuit, amperage is the total of ALL the loads, and that amperage is throughout the entire circuit. This is because we must travel THROUGH one load to get to the next load. But, on a parallel circuit, the amperage is in direct relation to the resistance of the particular load within each leg, and the combined amperage of everything that is on the entire circuit is only on the conductors that are feeding. This is where we will focus on some options we have (again, depending on what our local AHJ will accept).
LED lighting draws considerably less amperage than its incandescent/fluorescent counterparts. So, while installing 12/2 NM cable from the panel throughout the power portion of the circuit, once we leave the load side of the switch, that can be run in 14/2 since amperage draw is less. Consider this circuit- let’s say we have a parallel circuit with one receptacle feeding a 5a load, a second circuit feeding an 8a load, a light switch that was controlling 4 LED can lights at 1a, and a 3rd receptacle at the end completing our circuit. With the first 5a load running, the amperage draw would be 5a from the breaker through our load. Once we started our second 8a load, the conductors around that load would be drawing 8a but where they enter the circuit conductors “feeding” the other loads, the amperage draw is 13a. If we added the 4 can lights, those feeding conductors are drawing 14a now, but those on the load side of the switch are only drawing 1a! So, as long as the local AHJ accepts it, many contractors will run 12/2 conductors throughout the receptacle circuit and up to the line side of the switch, and swap over to 14/2 for the load side of the switch throughout the lighting portion. Over the course of a large home (or many smaller homes added together), the cost/labor savings can be substantial!
We hope this has been helpful in deciding which wire (14/2 or 12/2) to use when wiring a house. Is there a topic you would like to see discussed on Electrician U. Is there a topic you would like to see discussed? Please leave us a comment in the comments section and let us know. Please continue to follow Dustin Stelzer and Electrician U as we are constantly updating our content to assist our followers in becoming the best electricians that they can be.
#electrician #electrical #electricity #12gauge #14gauge

Пікірлер: 832
@1oddtech
@1oddtech Жыл бұрын
I always ran separate 15 amp circuits to the lights and 20 amps to receptacle circuits. Blow a receptacle breaker the lights stay on
@that1electrician
@that1electrician Жыл бұрын
How do you feel about MWBCs? Do you just avoid those altogether as well? I do.
@1oddtech
@1oddtech Жыл бұрын
@@that1electrician yup never did that, 12-2 for receptacle and 14-2 for lighting ceiling fans and exhaust fans. One receptacle circuit per bed room and two for kitchen.
@TimeSurfer206
@TimeSurfer206 Жыл бұрын
@@that1electrician Multi-Wire Branch Circuits (MWBC) are not recommended for residential applications. In part because many people like to CHEAT and use a 12/2 rope, with one phase on the black, one on white, and _the ground as a neutral!_ But, even when done right, you DO know what happens when you lose the Neutral on one, right? For those who don't know, an MWBC, properly done, is when you need two circuits, and only want to run one cable, so you put the Black on one breaker, and the Red on another, with the Neutral (Return) wire being shared by both circuits. (I hope like hell you're using a 2-Gang breaker AND 12/3! More on that in a mo'). The problem with the shared Neutral is that, if the Neutral ever gets broken, you now have 240 volts running across the appliances. Your 920 inch Samsung Big Screen has just let out the Magic Blue Smoke. Considering that Residential Electrician's wouldn't know a "Pigtail" if one bit them on the ass, and thus use the Stablocks on the receptacle as splices, all it takes is one of the receptacles early in the stream melting to interrupt the Neutral. (A pigtail is when you connect all the wires in a Junction Box together that need spliced with a wire nut [Or equivalent], with a 6" "Pigtail" coming out to feed the receptacle. This allows you to replace said receptacle later, without interrupting power to anything downstream.) And if you aren't using a 2-Gang Breaker, there's a chance that SOMEONE, somewhere, someday, will wire both conductors to the same phase. They might do this, even if you DO. And then the Neutral might be asked to carry 40 Amps back to the Breaker Panel, some day. It won't like that. Neither will your Homeowner's Insurance. And here's another reason I only carry 20 Amp Spec Grade Receptacles on my truck: Replacing 15 Amp receptacles that were used as a splice for a _20 Amp circuit!!_ When one does this, one has inserted a 15 Amp fuse in the 20 Amp circuit. This alone has made me much money. _That the client should never have had to pay!_
@LordSaliss
@LordSaliss Жыл бұрын
@@1oddtech This is the way.
@1oddtech
@1oddtech Жыл бұрын
@@LordSaliss This is the way
@mikejrog
@mikejrog Жыл бұрын
This answered a couple questions that have been nagging me for a while now -- hugely appreciated, thank you! :)
@gantmj
@gantmj 8 ай бұрын
Wire is sized for the breaker it's on, regardless of the load that may be on it. If the 14 AWG romex somehow gets cut on a can light housing or the LED fixture goes bad, and that draws a heavy load without shorting, the wire will get too hot before a 20A breaker trips at 27+ amps.
@adamcarter74
@adamcarter74 3 ай бұрын
This is exactly why I watched this video, we have new code inspectors, that I don't trust their knowledge, since they don't seem to have any experience at all. So now I need to figure out of I'm going to run a home run of 14/2 for all the lights and fans, or run 12/3 to 20 lights and two ceiling fans. From what I got out of his video that is fine, but I was still 2nd guessing the idea. Normally I run 12/2 for all 120v runs, since I have a bunch of rentals, and you never know when the tenants are going to try and heat the whole hose with space heaters. But this is for my house, and hate to waste that much 12/2 and 12/3 for a bunch of LED lights. IMO this video needs taken down, because from what I got out of the video it is fine to run a 20 amp breaker, then 12/2 to the outlets, then branch 14/2 off that.. but NEC 240.4(D)(3) says different. Well time to see how many spots I have left on the breaker panel.. that sucker is starting to run short, and not running them silly mini doubles.
@maxjankowski6892
@maxjankowski6892 2 ай бұрын
And yet most outlets are rated at 15amps on a 20 amps service, but I guess they'd melt in the box.?
@gantmj
@gantmj 2 ай бұрын
@maxjankowski6892 15a outlets are the same internally as 20s, minus the extra tab for a 20a plug, so daisy chaining 15s on 12awg wire on a 20a breaker is okay. It could get a melty neutral slot if someone managed to draw near 20a through one of the duplex outlets. I've seen that with an old window air conditioner that was running very inefficiently, and a space heater connected to a short appliance extention cord causing extra resistance.
@marvinwerth9421
@marvinwerth9421 Ай бұрын
I hate trimming in #12!
@serengetilion
@serengetilion 3 ай бұрын
WOW to you! I'm learning about running wire in my bathroom for an additional light which has 3 LED lights. You are the only one video I've watched that really explained things to me in the way I understand. Thanks for sharing
@benchociej2435
@benchociej2435 Жыл бұрын
NEC 240.4(D)(3) - if you have any 14 AWG copper wire, the overcurrent protection cannot exceed 15A
@danlake7970
@danlake7970 Жыл бұрын
This video is going to kill someone. :(
@FishFind3000
@FishFind3000 Жыл бұрын
@@danlake7970 he makes constant mistakes in multiple videos. To the point that he takes the whole video down because he’s a moron. I wouldn’t trust anything he says in these videos. The fact that he has a business selling education material to people who don’t know better is near criminal since he is giving out false information that is deadly.
@boby115
@boby115 Жыл бұрын
He just didn’t think this one out , he knows better. I believe his mouth just got carried away , not realizing what he was saying.
@randymathews3348
@randymathews3348 Жыл бұрын
​@@boby115 players f up too bro 😂
@mikerosoft1009
@mikerosoft1009 11 ай бұрын
I think he's talking about 'in theory' only, which doesn't help electricians or anyone else cause we have to follow code. If we lived in a Mad Max world where the code rules are long gone...his point is that you can put a smaller wire on branches of a circuit and it'll still be 'safe' for that small branch lol
@phi5head
@phi5head Жыл бұрын
By me, the only time 12 gets used on a 15A circuit is on really long homeruns to guard against voltage drop. And I never use 14 on a 20A circuit. We use 12 gauge(20A), for kitchen receptacles, bath receptacles, laundry receptacles, dining receptacles, and garage receptacles. Everything else gets 14 gauge(15A).
@briandish1787
@briandish1787 Жыл бұрын
I agree the Breaker is to protect the wire!
@hippo-potamus
@hippo-potamus Жыл бұрын
The cost difference when considering the better wire over the life of the system translates to pennies for a much better product long term. Same goes with using the higher quality 20amp receptacle outlets over the cheap homeowner grade 15amp outlets.
@andresdeanda6847
@andresdeanda6847 Жыл бұрын
Got a question for you, if you can give me a sneer that’s be cool! If you are installing a receptacle to a small commercial tv store should you be using 14 AWG or 12 AWG? Is there any specific code for it or do you follow the amps the receptacle you’re adding needs? (For example if I’m adding a 15 amp recep I use 14AWG because that’s rated for the 15A)?
@luismachin2933
@luismachin2933 Жыл бұрын
@@andresdeanda6847 You aren't allow to used 14 AWG in Commercial places
@electvolt67
@electvolt67 10 ай бұрын
Someone who knows what they are doing. 12 wire dummies!!
@miket5506
@miket5506 Жыл бұрын
The only thing I see wrong here is if you put 14/2 onto a circuit that has a 12/2 home run and is fed by a 20-amp breaker, you’re actually not in compliance because all the cabling that comes off a 20-amp breaker needs to be rated for 20 amps.
@tedlahm5740
@tedlahm5740 Жыл бұрын
Good point. confusion.
@suserman7775
@suserman7775 Жыл бұрын
Is it legal to put a breaker at the lower powered branch itself? Or a fuse?
@draaks1
@draaks1 Жыл бұрын
I have asked this question before and my understanding is that his jurisdiction and some other commenters' jurisdictions interpret the switch leg to be a fixture wire and fall under article 402... Excerpt from uses permitted section: "for connecting luminaires to the branch-circuit conductors supplying the luminaires". This one is iffy in my opinion, I don't like it even though it is probably 'safe' I'd rather spend the extra few cents a foot and just stick with #12.
@martf1061
@martf1061 Жыл бұрын
LED lighting is a pain in ass to connect with larger than 14awg. The connection box is so small.. and i dont know why. So, for lighting, use 15A breakers. And outlets, use 12/2 just in case you decide to change your 15A outlets to 15-20A outlets.
@adammorgan9304
@adammorgan9304 Жыл бұрын
Except working w 12 sucks wiener compared to 14. Pretty sure it falls under the fixture wires code section (I think someone else said 402). Just run lighting on a 15 amp breaker and then you’re safe.
@dtemp132
@dtemp132 Жыл бұрын
What you were describing at 1:45 to run 14AWG wire on a 20A circuit but just for the lighting legs of the circuit, I believe that is against code essentially everywhere, although I'd like to be proven wrong.
@inothome
@inothome Жыл бұрын
I want to know too.
@gerrishp22
@gerrishp22 Жыл бұрын
If 14 gauge wire is run anywhere in the circuit the breaker must be rated at 15 amps or less. If the breaker feeding a circuit is 15 amps you can mix and match 14 gauge and 12 gauge wire all you want
@inothome
@inothome Жыл бұрын
@@gerrishp22 Right, so why was he showing the 14 to the lights on a 20A breaker. That's what we all keep asking.
@benchociej2435
@benchociej2435 Жыл бұрын
NEC 240.4(D)(3) says that 14 AWG copper cannot be protected by a breaker larger than 15A
@danlake7970
@danlake7970 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. This should be a code violation everywhere. The breaker is there to protect the wiring inside the walls, not the LED lights at the end. A 20A breaker must use 20A/12ga wire throughout the entire circuit (except short taps which have special rules). When someone later adds a couple of standard receptacles to the 14ga branch, it may overload the wire and not trip the 20A breaker.
@musiklyfe7683
@musiklyfe7683 11 күн бұрын
First and foremost I want to thank you for taking your time to post these videos. I appreciate them deeper than you know. I'm one of those "ADHD" guys and I went to the electrician's apprenticeship at 37 years old. I learn best by hands on. And the apprenticeship I went through was well over 90% book work or computer. I went through it in the middle of the pandemic too so a lot of stuff was on zoom as well. Completely horrible for an ADHD brain like mine. I learn best by physically doing the work and then going back and seeing how it works because that makes it more interesting for my brain. I passed my apprenticeship a little above average but not by much and half of that was because I found the answers to a lot of my homework so I didn't end up doing a lot of it. Which also didn't help retaining any kind of knowledge. But now that I've been in the field working, I'm going back and watching these videos. It's like the puzzle pieces of my brain are finally falling into place. I'm a solid electrician when it comes to my work. It's always clean and it is always correct. But to have the understanding behind everything allows my troubleshooting skills to get that much better and to explain things a little bit better to the people around me when I'm doing my work. So again thank you for these posts.
@mytubebobbie06h
@mytubebobbie06h Жыл бұрын
Man, I don’t know if it’s how you explain it but it makes so much sense. I appreciate the content and the time you take to explain it visuals, it jumps makes it easier to understand. Keep the great content coming. I find super informative.
@joelboutier1736
@joelboutier1736 Жыл бұрын
IN THEORY that is correct… the switch leg will never carry the load the home run will carry. BUT, I’m pretty sure that code wise, the conductor size must match the rating of the breaker ampacity ALL THROUGHOUT THE CIRCUIT… meaning a #14 AWG switch leg on a 20 amp circuit still violates code. I think the new standard method of new construction home wiring is to run 15 amp circuits for lighting & smoke detectors because 14/2 & 14/3 is so much cheaper… especially for travelers & smoke detector interconnect… than 12/2 & 12/3, and LEDs are so efficient anyways. LEDs just don’t require much current like old incandescent bulbs. For circuits supplying receptacles & other power, electricians use #12 AWG/20 amp circuits in new construction to accommodate appliances that draw more current. A vacuum might draw 7 amps & a space heater might draw 12 so #14 AWG/15 amp circuits can be inadequate for powering receptacles. I still don’t think that #14 AWG switch leg on a 20 amp circuit would would pass with our inspectors even if in theory what you’re saying is totally correct. There are many portions of that circuit that will not carry the full load.
@hippo-potamus
@hippo-potamus Жыл бұрын
Yes, by adding the 14ga anywhere you must reduce the breaker to 15amps which would reduce the total allowable load rating of all the receptacle in the circuit from his example and totally negate any possible wire cost savings, which IMO is not even a good reason as long term over the life of the service those savings are negligible pennies a day for a better gauge wire. This video was good in theory but not in practice.
@austinluepkes5484
@austinluepkes5484 10 ай бұрын
I own a duplex where they basically did this on some of the receptacles. 20A breaker with some 14awg feeding the last few receptacles. Tenant had his gaming PC setup (multiple monitors, high power pc stuff etc) and nearby baseboard heat going. The 14awg was probably drawing over the 12 amps it really ever should have been drawing. With the combination of the heat from the pc and baseboard and the overloaded wire, it melted off the receptacle. Luckily didn’t start a fire but that’s how I found out about it. I imagine a 15 amp breaker may have prevented the problem which is what I put on instead. Moral of the story, DONT MIX AND MATCH WIRE!!!
@kimowilliams8258
@kimowilliams8258 Жыл бұрын
It's the same thing for us down here in the Caribbean. We use 14/2 for the light leg & 12/2 for everything coming out of the main breaker panel
@TimeSurfer206
@TimeSurfer206 Жыл бұрын
I hope those 15 Amp rated cables are only being connected to a circuit with a 15 Amp breaker.
@wesbravo8251
@wesbravo8251 3 ай бұрын
He said the 14 gauge is going to lights. Why would that be a problem?@@TimeSurfer206
@allenshepard7992
@allenshepard7992 Жыл бұрын
Great explanation. After working with cheap #18 luminary wire behind a fixture that breaks, I'd rather stick with something larger. Plus, if they repurpose the circuit for a vent fan or warming light they will need the current. Never cheat code, always go above the minimum.
@philibertperusse8998
@philibertperusse8998 Жыл бұрын
I completely disagree. If you have a 20 amps breaker, code does not allow you to reduce conductor size based on actual load except in very very specific situations. The idea being that if you have an overload (say a high impedance short circuit) in the circuit and you have reduced the conductor, it may melt before the cb trips. By sizing all conductors according to upstream protection you prevent this situation from happening
@briandish1787
@briandish1787 Жыл бұрын
I agree the Breaker is to protect the wire! or the equipment!
@FireStormOOO_
@FireStormOOO_ Жыл бұрын
Yeah that was my immediate thought; what clears the fault on the LED leg before the wire melts? In principal it'd be safe if that leg had an additional fuse or something but IDK if there's even code for that.
@hippo-potamus
@hippo-potamus Жыл бұрын
Plus once you start mixing different gauge wires and splicing things together it all becomes a mess to deal with for any future person making repairs or modifications.
@philibertperusse8998
@philibertperusse8998 Жыл бұрын
I changed my position on this. I am not worried about a sharp short-circuit condition that would cause 100s or even 1000s of amps to flow in the circuit. A 20A cb magnetic protection would trip instantenously and clear the fault and limit the total energy (Amps x Time) below the allowable thermal envelope of both 12AWG and 14AWG wires. I am worried about overloads or high impedence faults, which would limit the fault current to lower levels (between 15 and 20ish Amps), which takes the cb much much longer to clear and could generate too much energy and melt a 14AWG wire. Now, are there jurisdictions that consider the situation of such a fault happening unlikely enough for lighting legs that they build exceptions into local codes for reducing conductor size to 14AWG on a 20A breaker? Yes, I believe that is likely. I would still prefer feeing the lighting circuit from a 15A breaker though.
@jessequentin4441
@jessequentin4441 Жыл бұрын
@@philibertperusse8998 What about a fault condition that doesn't draw 100's of amps, but somewhere between 15 and 20? And is not detected for years, could that cause overheating in the 14-gauge wire and eventual breakdown of the insulation?
@OneWhoWas
@OneWhoWas Жыл бұрын
Interesting debate watching from the sidelines of non-trade but activtly intereted community. Looking forward to seeing where this ends up. 99/100 dustin gives us top notch content. And who knows what oddities are in different codes. Right or wrong, looking forward to being educated!
@cavscout888
@cavscout888 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for talking about this. I was even thinking of requesting it a few months ago. I've been really appreciating the design of circuits lately. Not getting crazy, but definitely reducing voltage drop as much as practical. Even doing 10/2 main runs with 12/2 or 14/2 off of them when practical. I'll need to read more in to when I'm still allowed to use 14/2 on 20a circuits if for specific devices. Was under impression that 20a means 14/2 is vorbotten, but maybe not. Will look. And will look for 240v as well, as a lot of the 240v I've done really did have low amp devices with short, harder to run, final circuits from main run.
@imtheonevanhalen1557
@imtheonevanhalen1557 7 ай бұрын
You can never go down in wire size....ever. If it's a 20 amp breaker, you have to stay 12 gauge the entire circuit.
@cavscout888
@cavscout888 7 ай бұрын
@@imtheonevanhalen1557 A device's wiring can be less. On dedicated 'hard' wiring, there's argument to be made for where that wiring begins, best I've heard. Reason, the wiring in most devices is significantly smaller. I feel a little disappointed and defeated when I oversize the conductors for a circuit only to be slicing to something like 16ga. But I know it's because those wires are short enough to be fine. Most power cords are also 14ga or much smaller. But it's also a lot easier to splice some 14ga to fish up through a floor to a baseboard heater than has 16ga wire inside it to splice to. Also, 240v. Lol
@dustincousins2825
@dustincousins2825 3 ай бұрын
Love the active board. Thanks again for the work.
@user-pl6ys3ys2e
@user-pl6ys3ys2e 4 ай бұрын
Nice and simply communicated info - thanks for your expertise and awesome communication skills/methods !!
@letmesignup12311
@letmesignup12311 Жыл бұрын
This makes sense. We’ve all seen the small tails when making up appliance’s. Although most contractors I know run 15 amp lighting circuits anyway
@Nick-zg2ym
@Nick-zg2ym Жыл бұрын
Woah. But if the homeowner goes screwing in a bunch of old incandescent bulbs, or one of those screw-in adapters that turns a light socket into a receptacle, or a cheap light fails in a weird way that draws too much power but isn't a dead short, then it's entirely possible to overload that 14AWG wire if it's on a 20A breaker. Is the breaker meant to protect the wiring or isn't it?
@soundman1402
@soundman1402 Жыл бұрын
My quite non-professional interpretation: If you're connecting can lights with sockets, that's a consideration; but the new LED luminaires don't have sockets for the lamps, so there's no way to connect an incandescent lamp to them. As for Dustin's comment that you could theoretically use tiny wire because the LEDs draw so little current, I was wondering about electrical fault danger, too. Seems like that wire could get dangerously hot, and provide enough resistance as to not draw the full trip amperage of the breaker. Would love to know if this is a legitimate concern.
@sdsconstruction
@sdsconstruction Жыл бұрын
​@@soundman1402 I thought about this a lot (have not gone to the code book yet) but how about this.....Regardless of 12 or 14 awg going to the LED fixture, (or even incandescent for that matter), the fixture itself is internally wired with 18awg so this is the lightest gauge wire on either a 20A or 15A breaker.
@Nick-zg2ym
@Nick-zg2ym Жыл бұрын
@@sdsconstruction Sure, but you can replace the fixture without cutting up all the drywall.
@benchociej2435
@benchociej2435 Жыл бұрын
First of all, if you have 14AWG anywhere in the branch circuit, the maximum breaker size is 15A. Even still, a lamp holder like you're describing isn't a luminaire per the code, so you can't rely on a particular low-power bulb being installed in it to reduce the load calculations. You'd have to assume that someone might install the most powerful possible bulb and plan accordingly.
@cavscout888
@cavscout888 5 ай бұрын
Ya, just like Dustin said you could use something crazy small, like coax or audio cable, he does close with using code or better. He's a decent advocate for minding/reducing voltage drop as well, which is generally only obtainable by 'oversizing' cable on the best new branch circuits.
@user-nl7fz9fx3c
@user-nl7fz9fx3c 4 ай бұрын
Thank you very much I really needed to know that information 👍
@tedlahm5740
@tedlahm5740 Жыл бұрын
Clear concise information. thank you
@DGTubbs
@DGTubbs 11 ай бұрын
Great video! Well produced, and I learned something. THANKS!!!
@Calico5string1962
@Calico5string1962 8 ай бұрын
If you "learned something" from this video, you're not an electrician. The concepts presented here are unsafe, and would be a code violation. You cannot safely (or legally) use #14 wire on a circuit protected by a 20A breaker (which would use #12 wire). Don't do it...
@ronlovell5374
@ronlovell5374 Жыл бұрын
In Canada, 14 gauge (15 amps) is commonly used for majority of homes outlet and lighting circuits, usually combind for individual rooms. 12 gauge(20 amps) is required for kitchens/dinning rooms, bathrooms, utility rooms and garages.
@samuelprudhomme3726
@samuelprudhomme3726 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I didn't even tought this had to be mentionned honestly... It's common sens. Isn't this channel for electricians only?
@vaska916
@vaska916 Жыл бұрын
That's how we wire.
@DGTubbs
@DGTubbs 11 ай бұрын
I have lived in Alabama my whole life. I purchase a newly built home in 2008. The wiring in that home was exactly as you described in Canada. I recently moved, buying a home built in 1985. I have seen some really janky wiring. Bedrooms have 15A and 14/2 Romex. But lighting and outlets are all on the same circuits. Additionally, they put the furnace/air handler on the same circuit as some outlets in the Main BR and the bathroom lighting. Plus, half the kitchen is on the same circuit as the dining room, basement stairwell and garage. Half the living room is on the same circuit as the basement lighting (separate from garage lighting), while the other half is on the same circuit is on the same circuit as the outside floods and the garage outlets (also separate from the garage lighting). Still, as janky as all that is, it isn't as janky as the house I grew up in, which was built in 1954. Let's just say that when I saw how the house was wired, I thank God each day that we all didn't die in a house fire growing up.
@charu002
@charu002 9 ай бұрын
There are some areas in canada that uses 12 instead of 14 because of how hot they are in the summer. Can’t remember exactly where
@stevelopez372
@stevelopez372 8 ай бұрын
@@DGTubbs Lol. Well don’t go into any houses built before world war ll. You will probably run down the street screaming. Houses are built to the code of that Era. The Code across the country is on a 3 year change cycle. So I’m sure your 2008 home is not in compliance with current code. Neither is my Custom built home from 1980. Nothing to worry about. Just maintain it and don’t do any thing Janky. Lol.
@craig6444
@craig6444 2 ай бұрын
Excellent explanation of parallel circuits. Thankyou.
@davidkahler9390
@davidkahler9390 Жыл бұрын
I don't think this is what you intended, but this video comes across as claiming you can run 14ga on a 20a breaker depending on the intended load. Which would be really bad if the intended load changed to something not intended. You should clarify.
@cavscout888
@cavscout888 5 ай бұрын
He does clarify, when he states the codes, to use as dictated in code, and showed the charts of required cable size to circuit (breaker) amperage.
@AMIR-nm7fo
@AMIR-nm7fo 9 ай бұрын
THANK YOU. I LEARNED MORE TODAY. THANK YOU.
@OtisPlunk
@OtisPlunk Жыл бұрын
The drain pump on my Whirlpool washing machine is fed by 21AWG from the factory with a factory vampire wire piercing connection for termination. The bean-counters probably got a nice Christmas Bonus for sizing the wire "just right". The vampire connection caused the wire to corrode and fall off the pump. That's how I found this ingenious bit of engineering.
@JV-pu8kx
@JV-pu8kx Жыл бұрын
I have 19AWG on a Kenmore vacuum, manufactured by Panasonic. You normally only see even-numbered sizes.
@willjohnsonjohnson
@willjohnsonjohnson Жыл бұрын
Some of my RC car speed controllers have 13AWG. Seems strange since most batteries for them come with 12AWG or thicker.
@jessequentin4441
@jessequentin4441 Жыл бұрын
Glad to see a lot of concern in the comments, reinforces my confusion watching the video. I am not an electrician but I've done a little research for DIY purposes. My understanding: 12-gauge wire needs 20-amp breaker protection, 14-gauge wire needs 15-amp breaker protection. Running 14-gauge wire anywhere in a circuit that is connected to a 20-amp breaker is a no-no because 14-gauge wire is only rated for 15 amps, so if there is some sort of fault condition in the circuit that draws more than 15 amps but less than 20 amps you could have a potential fire hazard.
@thefarmer5677
@thefarmer5677 Жыл бұрын
Very well explained - thanks for spending the time and effort to put this video together! Take care and God Bless.
@Bidenlost2020
@Bidenlost2020 Жыл бұрын
Amen!
@rangerrecon
@rangerrecon Жыл бұрын
My new home (2 years old) in Georgia used all 15 amp AFCI breakers and 14 gauge wire on all lighting and receptical circuits (except for dedicated, 20A recepticals like microwave, cloths washer, etc.).
@thomasbonse
@thomasbonse 9 ай бұрын
Yup, pretty standard mass produced home issue. The contractors do the minimum required because they don't have to live with the results.
@123mjolie
@123mjolie 7 ай бұрын
Great explanation!!
@jeffdieringer1
@jeffdieringer1 Жыл бұрын
As always, thanks for giving us a comprehensive and practical overview. Its helpful to understand both the theoretical and the real world applications of electrical design and installation.
@BryanTorok
@BryanTorok Жыл бұрын
Yeah, except he is wrong. Read the other comments.
@user-nl7fz9fx3c
@user-nl7fz9fx3c 4 ай бұрын
Thank you very much I really need to know that information
@Sparky272
@Sparky272 9 ай бұрын
Just learned more about parallel circuits in 8 minutes than I did the entire month we spent on dc theory in my union dc theory course. But my instructor was also more obsessed with his 20% fail quota he was trying to reach…. The way he teaches it’s no wonder 20% of his students fail first year.
@ianbutler1983
@ianbutler1983 5 ай бұрын
Please disregard this video. I am not sure what he was thinking, but this is wrong. Read the number of comments.
@cavscout888
@cavscout888 5 ай бұрын
It's good stuff, but do note the breaker is the safety for every device AND the cable of the circuit, so actually do use the cable coded. While yes, a shorter run of 14awg will perform just as well as a longer run of 12awg at 20a, and be safer, it's still codified as a no-go. Use this info to help reduce voltage drop! Meaning, to upsize certain runs, like the home runs with devices on pigtailed smaller awg 'twig' circuits. The professional who just wants to use the minimum required, do the minimum, just pass inspection; worries far less about the circuit's use and voltage drop, and more about the few dollars saved.
@rpvitiello
@rpvitiello Жыл бұрын
It’s funny, cuz in places like the UK, they do undersize the wire, and add an additional overcurrent protection on the smaller wire branch. That’s also why their plugs are so big, they have to have fuses in them so they don’t overload the building wire. There is low voltage lighting systems with smaller wiring, and even lighting that runs off of power over Ethernet now. Seems like we should start having mini “sub panels” where we run 12 2 to a room, then have a “mini panel” with 1 amp breakers and smaller wiring for “low amp” lighting circuits.
@paredoug
@paredoug 8 ай бұрын
Great explanation, thanks
@abrahammarquez6601
@abrahammarquez6601 8 ай бұрын
In Seattle inspectors will allow you to wire the house with 12 2 and 14 2 but not a mixed circuit, either all 12 awg or 14. Awg.
@Chevytech1977
@Chevytech1977 8 ай бұрын
Here in Ontario, Canada everything I usually 15 amp, 12/2. The Kitchen, bedrooms, and outside circuits are 20 amp 14/2. Kitchen and outside are yellow sheathing and bedrooms are blue and arc fault protected.
@robertthompson3447
@robertthompson3447 Жыл бұрын
Back in the days of incandescent lights and plug in the vacuum cleaners, bigger wires meant brighter lights and stronger vacuums. With LEDs and cordless electric, the demands on those circuits are much lower. Still remember to oversize the car charger, dryer, and range circuits. Reducing the voltage drop will save the customer thousands of dollars over the life of the home.
@TimeSurfer206
@TimeSurfer206 Жыл бұрын
Ding ding ding! This is why I use 12 gauge for lighting. Many electricians like to overlook how convoluted and LONG a lighting run can get.
@miket5506
@miket5506 Жыл бұрын
I totally see what you’re saying. But those cordless battery powered vacs will never compare to a plug in the wall vac. I have one of those cordless vacs and, to get the same suction as it’s corded counterpart from the same brand, I have to put it on “boost” mode. That gives me maybe 10-15 minutes of vac time before the battery is completely depleted. Who wants to vac for 10 mins and then charge for 4 hours to get another 10min of vac time? It’s like electric vehicles. Waste of time.
@phi5head
@phi5head Жыл бұрын
The vast majority of people still use a plug-in vacuum cleaner.
@robertthompson3447
@robertthompson3447 Жыл бұрын
@@miket5506 Guess it just depends on how much floor you have. 🤷‍♂ I have a lawn service. 5 years ago I would not have even entertained the idea of cordless electric OPT. Now all my equipment is battery electric. It was just a matter of solving the refueling problem. Having said that, I agree, there are some battery powered tools out there that only belong in the discount stores where cheep people buy cheep merch.
@sathivv950
@sathivv950 Жыл бұрын
@@miket5506 Never? Technology advances. I give it 5-10 years before most battery powered tools will surpass the performance of plug in varieties.
@timothyraytaylorjr1224
@timothyraytaylorjr1224 8 ай бұрын
I'm running a outlet to my crawlspace a 15 amp GFCI outlet from a kitchen outlet that never gets used . What size wire should I run the outlet with ? Any help would be appreciated.! The outlet is to run a dehumidifier and a condensation pump and 60 cfm exhaust fan .
@rty1955
@rty1955 Жыл бұрын
I was always told NEVER to mix gauges of wire. For example, if I run a 12 gauge to an outlet off your light circuit, the 14 gauge wire would get hot in the wall, with the breaker never going to trip. A big no-no. I was told to protect the circuit for the lowest wire gauge and in your example. if you use #14 for your lights, the circuit breaker should be a 15a. Not 20a Correct?
@mitchellhofmann2981
@mitchellhofmann2981 Жыл бұрын
Pretty sure you are right. If there is a fault at any point on that 14 on the 20amp circuit you will get the full fault current of a 20amp circuit and the breaker will take longer to trip potentially giving Time for that fault to create other issues
@phillipjondreau4722
@phillipjondreau4722 Жыл бұрын
That’s what I’ve always understood. The breaker protects the conductor not the device.
@LordSaliss
@LordSaliss Жыл бұрын
You are misunderstanding what is being said in the video. Dustin didn't say you can run 12awg to a receptacle from your lighting circuit, unless the entire wire from the circuit itself to the receptacle is 12awg, and the smaller gauge for lighting is only possible in some places where an inspector will allow it. You cannot start at a 20A breaker, go 14awg up to some lights, then 12awg down to a receptacle. It must be: 20A breaker to a receptacle with 12awg, from the receptacle to a switch at 12awg, from the switch to the light at 14awg. That 14 cannot go to anything else and must only go to the lights themselves and only after the switch. A short in the 14awg area will perform about the same as a short in the 12awg area. Both of them would draw more than 20A, and both shorts would trip the breaker. The 14awg is also still oversized to the current LED loads, but is sized correctly to the load if someone were to switch to incandescent again (though those aren't even sold any longer so you can't really do that). Per the current NEC 240.5(B)(2), you are allowed to do this for light fixture lighting.
@inothome
@inothome Жыл бұрын
@@LordSaliss But the breaker is still to protect the wiring in case of faults or overload. Read all the other comments asking the same thing.
@phillipjondreau4722
@phillipjondreau4722 Жыл бұрын
@@LordSaliss I think you might be misunderstanding the function of an OCPD. It is a safety device. In the event of a fault where more current flows than the #14 is rated for the 20A breaker won’t protect it. It being a lightning portion of the circuit is irrelevant since the breaker is there to protect from abnormal operating conditions. (Fault)
@garbo8962
@garbo8962 Жыл бұрын
Of course with the vast # of exemptions you are allowed to have a 14 guage line feeding a dedicated motor load such as a air compressor or air conditioner on a 20 amp circuit breaker to prevent a 15 amp breaker from tripping due to locked rotor current during start up. Same with a #12 guage wire can be feed from a 25 or 30 amp breaker. If you had a mansion with a fire pump breaker would be very high.
@gurusage
@gurusage Жыл бұрын
Something seems off in the presentation. I thought the NEC forbade running cables with smaller gauge wires than the breaker’s rating for the branch. E.g., can’t use 20 amp circuit breaker to protect a 14 gage (15 amp rated) cable. Otherwise, a shorted current of say 19 amps wouldn’t trip the breaker but it would overheat the 15 amp rated cable and potentially cause a fire. Do you have the NEC reference for this?
@claysmith428
@claysmith428 3 ай бұрын
20 years ago, all romex was white and I thought the reason it was color coded (#12 = yellow) was to allow inspectors to easily identify what is being demonstrated in this video. I do think what is being taught in this video is low risk (since LED lighting draws small amount of current), but also would like know the NEC code allowing this practice.
@A_Canadian_In_Poland
@A_Canadian_In_Poland 3 ай бұрын
I believe this is the case except for certain branch circuits supplying AC motors with a starting surge.
@narlycharley
@narlycharley Жыл бұрын
It's always so much pleasurable to work with the 14 gauge vs the 12 when you do.
@TimeSurfer206
@TimeSurfer206 Жыл бұрын
Especially when it's a Rental, and they're using Space Heaters. Melted receptacles are Job Security.
@vaska916
@vaska916 Жыл бұрын
​@@TimeSurfer206 it won't melt if it's on a 15 amp with 14 wire.
@DGTubbs
@DGTubbs 11 ай бұрын
I knew a guy whose father cut sheet metal with tin snips for US Steel his whole career. I also served in the Reserve with a guy whose civilian job was as a commercial electrician, who only ever worked with 12 AWG wire. I shook each man's hand once. After that, they only got knuckle bumps from me.
@TimeSurfer206
@TimeSurfer206 11 ай бұрын
@@vaska916 I just got back from a job yesterday with two pieces of scrap that prove you're wrong. They were 15A, El Cheapo Contractor Specials, on 12 gauge with a 15A breaker. They were replaced with Spec Grade 20A's. It's a Rental. The cheaper you go in a Rental, _the quicker it's going to break._
@peterford9369
@peterford9369 11 ай бұрын
Makes sense that you could run #14 off a switch leg. Also it's easier to identify the light wires at a glance vs having to test for your hot feed. I think they recommend 12-2 all round is to simplify safety verification. No chance of an overheat due to resistance. Though like you said, smaller would carry the load. I mean most fixtures only have like 18 or 20 gauge strand or solid in them. So that's automatic resistance right there. But, it's contained. Where your lines run tacked to wooden studs and joists. Potential heat absorbers. And, if someone gets heavy on the hammer with a staple, it could be a potential fire later. My daughter had an outlet with a toaster plugged into it that kept tripping the breaker. I pulled the box, checked the wiring, the outlet, found nothing. Went to the panel and looking, spotted nothing. But when I pulled the breaker, whomever stripped the wire at the breaker cut almost all the way through the wire. So when the toaster ran for several minutes the wire got so hot it kicked the breaker. So, in the famous words of the Borg, resistance is futile .
@zerosparky9510
@zerosparky9510 8 ай бұрын
i know a electrician who always crushed the wires in a panel. told him to quit doing that. bad work like that. will lead to problems. like yours.
@toddlehew115
@toddlehew115 Жыл бұрын
You guys are the best!
@MedSpark
@MedSpark 8 ай бұрын
This fails to account for a wiring fault (such as critters chewing the insulation) or an overload situation that could cause 14ga to get too hot and start a fire. You can’t put 14ga on a 20a breaker no matter how you want to spin it!
@cavscout888
@cavscout888 5 ай бұрын
But he said that and showed the chart.
@NathanHarrison7
@NathanHarrison7 Ай бұрын
Greatest YT Electrician Instructor ever. I challenge you to find a better KZbin electrician channel. I wish I could subscribe 100 times.
@jontnoneya3404
@jontnoneya3404 8 ай бұрын
I've had this question about extension cords. I'm using my dad's old extension cord and it's from the 80s and I didn't see any markings on it. I have no idea what size it is. I ended up buying a 25' 12/3 simply because they said it could handle 20 amps and it has 3 plugs on it. Doubt I'll ever use that much but I feel better knowing I've got a good one now.
@theseattlegreen1871
@theseattlegreen1871 Жыл бұрын
I will never use 12/2 Romex for lighting in any type of residential application. I really can care less what the authority having jurisdiction aka the inspector has to say about it. Because the inspectors job is to make sure we did our job up to the NEC. Inspector is not there to make up his own rules which many of them tried to do.
@LiloUkulele
@LiloUkulele 9 ай бұрын
12/2 for outlets-20a, 14/2 for lights-15a
@yeroca
@yeroca Жыл бұрын
Personally, if I was building a house right now, I'd go with 12/2 everywhere, just because you don't know how you're going to use the house in the future. A little extra headroom feels like a good idea. I'd bet that upgrading even just one branch at a later date is going to cost more than the difference of using 12/2 versus 14/2. 12/2 is harder to work with, though.
@FishFind3000
@FishFind3000 Жыл бұрын
Their forcing everything to be electric so it’s better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it.
@jerrynorris1397
@jerrynorris1397 11 ай бұрын
I totally agree I never use 14 /2 for anything I don’t care if it costs a little less
@josephbikes
@josephbikes 8 ай бұрын
It’s actually surprising how quickly you can run into box fill issues with #12 in residential boxes.
@ericschulze5641
@ericschulze5641 8 ай бұрын
You plan on welding in your living room ? other than electric range or water heater, there's no reason for #12 in a home
@yeroca
@yeroca 8 ай бұрын
@@ericschulze5641 In my case, we have a home office with four relatively high-end computers, a laser printer, and a 3D printer all on one circuit. Add a space heater and it's pushing tripping the breaker.
@joequinn3056
@joequinn3056 7 ай бұрын
@Electrician U If i am running a bedroom can i put the lights (LED) on 14/2 & also add my receptacles with 12/2 as long as I run 12/2 straight to the panel??
@JohnThomas-lq5qp
@JohnThomas-lq5qp 8 ай бұрын
Maybe 40 years ago in my area you were allowed to run 14/2 from a wall case that had a switch to control ceiling lights that were feed off a 12 guage 20 amp circuit breaker but no longer.
@jonclark1288
@jonclark1288 Жыл бұрын
This video could've been 2 minutes long. As long as you're installing a 15A breaker (and your AHJ allows 15A circuits), then yes you can use #14 wire, because #14 copper can handle 15A (240.4(D)(4)). If you're running a 20A circuit, then you MUST use #12 (or larger) wire. There are exceptions, but none of them apply to running Romex to light fixtures. EVERY section of wire must be at least #12, even if it's just feeding a single light fixture.
@phi5head
@phi5head Жыл бұрын
He seems to disagree with you.
@jonclark1288
@jonclark1288 Жыл бұрын
@@phi5head And I disagree with him. I read all of the code sections he mentioned in the video, and nothing in any of those sections says that you can run #14 to light fixtures on a 20A circuit. I'm more than willing to admit I'm wrong if someone points out a code section that says otherwise.
@phi5head
@phi5head Жыл бұрын
@@jonclark1288 I'm with you. It will be interesting to see if he addresses all of the people in the comments telling him he's wrong to be doing that.
@wangsaundes
@wangsaundes Жыл бұрын
Ahj was the key words here
@willjohnsonjohnson
@willjohnsonjohnson Жыл бұрын
​@@jonclark1288 It doesn't make sense to me. i can understand if it's a 15A breaker. #12 to the outlets to prevent voltage drop, and #14 to lights since under normal loads they draw very little power. But even then, I rather have #12 go to the lights since I've had issues with LEDs flickering when the voltage drops slightly. Also don't have to worry about how much of what # wire you have, just buy #12 and forget about it.
@CybAtSteam
@CybAtSteam 4 ай бұрын
When i recently rewired my house i ran 12/2 on 20amp breakers for power and 14/2 on 15amp breakers for lights. Two breakers for each room. Everything was inspected without issues.
@sparky8910
@sparky8910 Жыл бұрын
Wow, that was confusing and conflicting information about circuitry and ampacity. You have to use correct overcurrent protection for the smallest size wire on a branch circuit, so combining 12cu and 14cu is not recommended or legal. Unless your loads on the 14gauge wire is on the load side of a low voltage driver and/or transformer
@ssl3546
@ssl3546 Жыл бұрын
While fixture whips can be undersized there is no provision allowing what you described. You can't just refer generally to three different sections none of which say what you want. NM is not a "fixture wire."
@DavidBerquist334
@DavidBerquist334 9 ай бұрын
On a 20 amp circuit if I have 12 going to the switches can 14 just go from the switch to the light
@hammerridecycling7630
@hammerridecycling7630 6 ай бұрын
hello,can i use 12/2 romex on recess/pot lights?
@patrickdavis4860
@patrickdavis4860 8 ай бұрын
Very informative video. Can you maybe demo how to correctly split off different gauge wires in these types of a setup? Is there a certain way that has to be followed to join different gauge wires together for the different circuits. For example -Are separate junction boxes needed when changing gauge - different from the ones that the switch or receptacle would reside in? I always thought it was bad to join different gauge wires together but this explains the theory how it can be safe in certain instances. Note - I am no electrician just your typical DIY type.
@Calico5string1962
@Calico5string1962 8 ай бұрын
You can't. Unless there is overcurrent protection ahead of the smaller wire, it is a code violation (and potential fire hazard) to connect smaller wire (#14) anywhere in a circuit using #12 wire.
@Bob.W.
@Bob.W. Жыл бұрын
I just wired a circuit to a shed with no. 10 from a subpanel out the garage to a carport, then no. 12 underground, all on a 15 amp breaker. All for voltage drop.
@scott1395
@scott1395 4 ай бұрын
I've always used #12 wire for everything but the dedicated smoke / carbon detectors cir! I pigtail all my receipts! Easy to fing and nothing else goes off! More time consuming but worth it!
@PaulSteMarie
@PaulSteMarie 7 ай бұрын
That 1A in the lighting leg is normal current, not fault current. Say that there is a partial short in one of the lights and it starts drawing 18A. That won't trip the breaker, but it will overload the wiring in that branch. If you want to use smaller wire, then put the lights on a separate branch with a smaller breaker.
@majorintherepublick5862
@majorintherepublick5862 8 ай бұрын
It’s smart to go lighting with 14-2 and all outlets with 12-2, saves money, and it works
@walkngdude
@walkngdude Жыл бұрын
You could feed it with #10/2 NMB and come off with #14 as long as you put the whole circuit on a 15-amp breaker.
@RichSmith-oy7qm
@RichSmith-oy7qm 8 ай бұрын
No good. What if u move and the new homeowner or someone not familiar with what u did puts a 20 circuit breaker in because maybe the 15 was bad for what ever reason. That’s why u don’t mix .
@fcon2002
@fcon2002 8 күн бұрын
For me, it's not just about the cost, but the flexibility of the wire. It's so much easier to work with 14 gauge than 12 gauge.
@westtexasprepper
@westtexasprepper 6 ай бұрын
Question: getting ready to wire a shop - Better to use Romex or single wires? Your opinion?
@d6c10k4
@d6c10k4 Жыл бұрын
This is an unrelated question but is it ok to use 12 ga THWN stranded wire in underground pvc conduit, or do I need to use a direct bury rated flat 12/2 w/g cable?
@Mike-01234
@Mike-01234 2 ай бұрын
Guy I worked with he said high frequency switching power supplies can cause harmonics on the neutral wire get enough of those on a shared neutral overload it.
@lahcfaou9207
@lahcfaou9207 5 ай бұрын
Hi can I use extension plastic on metal box thank you
@Alphasig336
@Alphasig336 8 ай бұрын
Even if planning on LED, if installing an E26 socket device requires we use Maximum of the rating in box. We still have to use 12 on lights because of this.
@cavscout888
@cavscout888 5 ай бұрын
Think he was talking the directly wired LED fixtures. It would feel ridiculous to be running 12awg just to get to each light and use their cheap push-connect fittings to splice to tiny ~20awg wire and to draw ~10w. Code is bureaucracy, and the actual goal of any bureaucracy is survival, not their propaganda message as to what their mission is. It's rarely very efficient, usually adds needless cost, and long term makes what they control overall worse and eventually unaffordable.
@antoniosagamuccio7370
@antoniosagamuccio7370 8 ай бұрын
If I'm doing an electrical rough-in I never put overhead lighting on the same circuit as outlets. You don't want a fault at an outlet to leave you in the dark. 14 ga for overhead lighting, 12 ga for outlets as a general rule. I will use 12 for overhead lighting for a couple of reasons, like in large (on-suite) bathrooms that might have multiple ceiling lights, exhaust fans, and potentially a heat lamp fixture outside of the shower to aid in drying, or in rooms that have multiple ceiling fixtures where the bulbs can easily be replaced with over wattage bulbs like swapping six 15 watt LED flood lights out for 300 watt halogen flood lights. That would put you at the max rated capacity for that 14 ga circuit. Not good.
@Starwarsgames66
@Starwarsgames66 Ай бұрын
I only use 12 or greater (10,8,6). I really am not a fan of 14 even though it’s easier to work with it’s just not satisfactory for future proofing and the last thing I wanna do is rerun freaking electrical wires. Better just to suffer a tiny bit more when you’re doing an install. Also, the price is negligible for the difference going from 14 to 12.
@mannyfestoINS
@mannyfestoINS 8 ай бұрын
Bro I know all this. Learned it quite some time ago. I can’t tell you how invaluable these videos are. New info, new insight, refreshers, different methods. It’s all great stuff and I encourage you to keep it coming!
@gabe1254
@gabe1254 3 ай бұрын
I kept all lighting circuits separate from receptacle circuit when I wired my house. 15a breakers and 14ga wire. Every single light inside and outside my home adds up to like 2 amps.
@garbo8962
@garbo8962 Жыл бұрын
I'm retired and shocked over high price of copper wire. Think the first 250' box of 12/2 NM cable that I purchased was only $12. Always ran 12/2 to each bedroom but still think the NEC should follow you to run 14/2 to luminaries especially since they are now LED'S consuming less then 1 amp. Heard they want 14/2 copper clad aluminum cable be installed to tree luminares and be in a maximum of a 10 amp circuit breaker.
@cavscout888
@cavscout888 5 ай бұрын
On a circuit with a dual function breaker, yep; but otherwise the breaker has to be sized to protect everything when things go wrong, including the cable, so it's more about sizing the breaker/fuse protection to the circuit cable and devices rather than the other way around (like we normally think of it).
@pointbreak8293
@pointbreak8293 8 ай бұрын
I believe the code should be lighting =14/2 or (12/2 optional) and all plug receptacles 12/2 regardless… just my opinion. I see too many people for all the items they plug in these days overloading more 14/2 receptacles than 12/2 receptacles… nice video as always dustin…👍👍👍
@cavscout888
@cavscout888 5 ай бұрын
If I was to reinvent the wheel tomorrow, I'd want homeruns to run in attics or basements, with essentially pigtailed 'twig' circuits down/up to devices. The homeruns would be oversized, to 10awg for circuits with receptacles, though pigtailed out to receptacles with 12awg. Less in walls, more access, safer with receptacles pigtailed, and easier to modify like adding new receptacles/other devices.
@doc13067
@doc13067 Жыл бұрын
My mind is blown. I thought you can’t run wires rated below the OCPD. If something goes wrong (even though it’s not going to happen) and those lights draw 16 amps, that 1AWG is going to heat up. Have I been wrong this whole time? I can maybe see what you’re saying if it was a low voltage system with a transformer involved. Otherwise I’m going to be looking into this for the next 6 months trying to convince myself it’s ok lol.
@jonclark1288
@jonclark1288 Жыл бұрын
You're correct. I just spent over an hour reading the NEC researching this, and basically: 20A circuit = #12 wire or larger only. #14 wire = 15A breaker only. There are some exceptions, but none of them apply to running Romex to light fixtures. Fixture wires and tap conductors that run no more than 18" from a junction box to the fixture can be #14 or smaller, but anything beyond that has to be sized to the breaker.
@peterwest323
@peterwest323 Жыл бұрын
As an electrical engineer, It's not the way I would ever design a circuit released into the wild. Although you might get away with it without killing anyone if you have an AFCI breaker on the line.
@doc13067
@doc13067 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for clarifying. I could still see using it on cabinet lighting that was 12 volts but I wouldn’t want that on a 20A breaker either. Would AFCI possibly save you from killing someone because it should trip before a condition is met that would cause it to draw more than 15 amps? Because I’m thinking if for some reason it draws 16 amps without an arc the 20A AFCI is going to let the wire heat up. Obviously this is becoming academic now.
@mxslick50
@mxslick50 8 ай бұрын
@@doc13067 And you would be correct. The "electrical engineer" you responded to proves the case that most engineers don't know jack about what they are talking about. The AFCI protects against ARC FAULTS, NOT OVERCURRENT which is the main issue. The ONLY way an AFCI would be of benefit is IF the overcurrent finally melted the wire enough to start an arc fault, which the AFCI MIGHT clear. But by that point, enough heat would have been generated to start a fire. Mr. Engineer needs to learn how the real world works, and crack open a Code Book AND learn about Ohm's Law and current ampacities of materials.
@andrewbailey5759
@andrewbailey5759 8 ай бұрын
Where i live if you mix 12 and 14 awg wire in the same circuit the breaker has to be 15 amp
@honorelectricalllc5883
@honorelectricalllc5883 2 ай бұрын
Use only the size cable the nec writes as minimum for whatever circuit/home run you are pulling. Only recommend pulling many extra circuits/home runs. Like one to the garage door openers.
@TimeSurfer206
@TimeSurfer206 Жыл бұрын
I only carry 12 gauge wire, and 20 amp breakers and receptacles in my truck. For two reasons. The first is reduced number of Line Items in the inventory of my truck. The second reason is Space Heaters. If anyone ever uses a Space Heater on a 15 amp circuit, that one appliance is pulling the maximum de-rated (80% Constant) load for said 15 amp circuit. And Space Heaters are why I also use SPEC GRADE outlets. Because the el cheapo 79 cent receptacles you Residential Boys are so fond of LOVE TO MELT when they actually have to work. And just to make it clear for anyone who is confused about the sizes needed on a circuit: _If you connect any wire to a 20 Amp circuit,_ *IT BETTER BE A 20 AMP WIRE.* (Or bigger. Per the NEC.) The breaker is there keep the wires from melting in your wall and starting a fire. THAT is its job. It is NOT there to protect your toaster, it's there to protect your ass.
@mattolson7037
@mattolson7037 Жыл бұрын
Aren’t space heaters supposed to be on a dedicated circuit? Therefor it wouldn’t matter if it’s on a 20 amp circuit, it would still be against code if that breaker is supplying other receptacles. I could be wrong, but this is what I was told
@benchociej2435
@benchociej2435 Жыл бұрын
You don't even carry 15A breakers? Hopefully you never need to replace one?
@TimeSurfer206
@TimeSurfer206 Жыл бұрын
@@benchociej2435 I never said I didn't. YOU did. I don't carry 15 Amp RECEPTACLES. Or any quality less than Spec Grade. I tend to work on mostly rentals, so, residential grade just means I'll be back in a week. The point is, I keep needless Line Items out of my truck because of weight. Since I can use a conduit compression fitting legally and effectively anywhere I could use a setscrew fitting. Adapters and couplings for 1/2" and 3/4" EMT means 4 boxes and about 50 pounds I don't need to haul around. Thinking like this adds up fast.
@petercampbell4220
@petercampbell4220 9 ай бұрын
OP for this makes sense for the repair electrician. It is 100$ to ring the doorbell, leaving the job with top quality that cost a few dollars makes sense/customer satisfaction. The affordable housing builder will not do this, as it adds up fast, and he will lose the bid.
@TimeSurfer206
@TimeSurfer206 8 ай бұрын
@@petercampbell4220 Absolutely correct. We live in two different worlds.
@johncolon244
@johncolon244 9 ай бұрын
Can l ran 14/2=15amp cable thru the ceiling and And outlet to turn light on of the ceiling in the attic.
@elab7731
@elab7731 11 ай бұрын
Dude, you can't run the switch-legs of a 20a circuit in 14/2. WTH?
@petercampbell4220
@petercampbell4220 Жыл бұрын
I did not see a mention on conductor volume in recessed cans JB. Lots are only rated for 2 14/2 cables, not 2. 12/2 cables.
@user-gy9il4it4b
@user-gy9il4it4b Ай бұрын
Always use 12/2 when wiring lights and receptacles because it's like having extra insurance but of course just 20 amp
@mba2ceo
@mba2ceo 8 ай бұрын
How do U connect legs to branch ?
@scott79transam
@scott79transam 8 ай бұрын
That is great unitil someone decides that they want to add something and they find rhe wires and tap off of it with something that is a possible heavuy load and now that low draw branch is exceeding wire rating. In this example it would be better to show a downsize in wire guage close to the device load or at least indicate that the wire is not Romex. Motors and lamps do it all the time with lighter guage wires but you typically would not tap into a cord or stranded pair at the load.
@spelunkerd
@spelunkerd 4 ай бұрын
One of the differences between Canada and the US is use of 12/2. For residential homes almost all circuits are 14/2, 15A circuits. Those 20A circuits that you guys use are rare here, at least in homes built ten years ago. I find that particularly irritating in my garages over the years. Some power tools like my table saw are right at the limit of 15 A circuits, and old homes share lighting with power outlets. Add in the voltage drop from panel to garage, and the table saw needs to spike current higher (and longer) to spool up. That's a recipe for a blown circuit breaker.
@LouisMedina-tl6of
@LouisMedina-tl6of Ай бұрын
Question on parallel ckt example where it is mentioned branch circuits could use smaller size wire if loads are small. How would the smaller wires sized ckts be protected from a SHORT condition in the branch? I would think 20A would be sourced from the main panel and burn the wires that could not handle the current.
@jarrydee2799
@jarrydee2799 Жыл бұрын
I only use 12 on bath dedicated, kitchen, laundry recep and garage recep.
@BigmoRivera
@BigmoRivera 11 ай бұрын
Great ⚡️ Job
@garyhempel6316
@garyhempel6316 8 ай бұрын
i have always been of the opinion that lighting should be on its own circuit. Also, all receptacles in a room should NOT be on the same circuit. Reasoning is that if you have to work on a receptacle, you can kill the circuit that receptacle is on and still have lighting and a hot receptacle in the room if you need if for any reason. But i seldom see that. and its sad.
@Privat2840
@Privat2840 8 ай бұрын
If you are building your own home your logic is sound, but contractors bid on these houses and they are insanely competitive. If you included any extras above minimal electrical code you price your self out of the job. Sounds crazy but the numbers are that tight.
@garyhempel6316
@garyhempel6316 8 ай бұрын
@@Privat2840 i blame ion the architect. that should be that way on the prints so they get bid that way. Also, AC units should not be in attics and flex duct and ductboard should be illegal. BUT if people continue to accept junk work they will get worse than that as time goes on.
@Podmore1000
@Podmore1000 Жыл бұрын
In my company, if we are doing a remodel or service call and find 14awg wiring on a 20 amp breaker, we will ALWAYS downsize the breaker to a 15 amp one or upsize the wire. You never know what may have changed in an older home.
@Privat2840
@Privat2840 8 ай бұрын
You do so because that what the Electrical Code says to do.
@microcolonel
@microcolonel 8 ай бұрын
OCPD protects the wire, devices, and (to a lesser extent) appliances, I think that for receptacle branch circuits we should run conductors that match the devices even if the expected load is much less. 2023 NEC 210.23 permits 10A lighting circuits, maybe go that route if you have an opportunity for extra breakers, and it may not be that much more wire overall.... if you could buy 10A breakers and 16/2 NM lol.
@dosgos
@dosgos 8 ай бұрын
Future repair might be confusing with white and yellow wires in the same complex circuit.
@russrockino-rr0864
@russrockino-rr0864 3 ай бұрын
14 is allowed here in Oregon, and is actually used more here for lighting circuits. Most lighting nowadays is LED and the load is less than it ever has been. There is even a provision in the new NEC for a new 10 amp breaker. Wether or not Manufacturers pick this up, is yet to be seen. If you are running a mile or more of wire, 14 can be quite a cost savings. Thanks, Russ 28 years in the Trade.
@RusherResiElectric
@RusherResiElectric Жыл бұрын
My grandfather, who I apprenticed under, used to do it this way, 14awg switch leg on 20 amp circuit. Although theoretically okay, I would highly advise against it. Talk with your AHJ. It's very easy for an inspector to call this out and fail you. NEC makes it pretty clear not to put 14awg anywhere on a 20A circuit
Won't These Melt?!? 15amp Receptacles on 20 amp Circuits!!!
11:47
Electrician U
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
Не пей газировку у мамы в машине
00:28
Даша Боровик
Рет қаралды 4 МЛН
SHE WANTED CHIPS, BUT SHE GOT CARROTS 🤣🥕
00:19
OKUNJATA
Рет қаралды 4 МЛН
Barriga de grávida aconchegante? 🤔💡
00:10
Polar em português
Рет қаралды 38 МЛН
Are You an Electrician? These are 5 Formulas You Should Know!
17:00
Electrician U
Рет қаралды 785 М.
Does Current Flow on the Neutral?
23:03
Electrician U
Рет қаралды 1 МЛН
Neutral Imbalance in Multiwire Branch Circuits (Two Hots, One Neutral)
16:41
How NOT to Wire Light Switches in 2024 (New Rules)
15:21
Backyard Maine
Рет қаралды 690 М.
How To Rough In a Switch Box Feeding Lights & Outlets
18:50
Benjamin Sahlstrom
Рет қаралды 622 М.
How many Amps to burn up 14/2 electrical wiring?
11:45
Electromagnetic Videos
Рет қаралды 523 М.
The Dangers of Shared Neutrals: How To Avoid Being Shocked
8:45
Electrician U
Рет қаралды 207 М.
Не пей газировку у мамы в машине
00:28
Даша Боровик
Рет қаралды 4 МЛН