No, AWG 12 is fine for 20 Amp service and is what is commonly used unless it is a very long run and you are not likely to encounter that in anything residential general use. AWG 12 is fine.would you choose 10 over 12?
Ron
No, AWG 12 is fine for 20 Amp service and is what is commonly used unless it is a very long run and you are not likely to encounter that in anything residential general use. AWG 12 is fine.would you choose 10 over 12?
No, AWG 12 is fine ...
Oh man am I glad I listened and didn't order 10AWG online. I ended up buying it by the foot at Home Depot and I probably wouldn't have gone with 10 once I felt it, because even 12 gauge is quite beefy. I had just 3 conductors to push through about 12' of 1/2" conduit and it went through easily. I was able to have both ends of the conduit open for that step and then closed everything up after pulling the wire through.Number 10 solid is a challenge to pull around even one bend. #12 is easier...
That depends on the outlet. Most have the ground lug connected to the metal frame so no you do not need to run an additional ground wire to the green screw since the gang box is metal. Now in the case of a plastic gang box the box has no ground screw so yes, the green ground wire to the green ground screw. Since you have a metal box which is grounded and since the metal of the outlet itself is connected to the ground lug on the receptical there is no need to connect the green screw on the receptical to ground. Hope I made this clear enough.Question about grounding: My two new boxes are weatherproof metal and have a grounding terminal built in. I grounded the boxes using the green wires. The weatherproof outlet receptacles I installed also have a green grounding screw. Is it proper to NOT use that terminal, since the receptacle is screwed into a grounded metal box, or do I need to go back in and run a short jumper, a grounding pigtail, from the box to the green screw on the receptacle?
Yes, but I've found other suggestions online that the receptacle's mounting screws are not an acceptable ground connection. There are such things as self-grounding receptacles that include a spring clip to better ensure a good connection to the box, but I don't have those.That depends on the outlet. Most have the ground lug connected to the metal frame so no you do not need to run an additional ground wire to the green screw since the gang box is metal. Now in the case of a plastic gang box the box has no ground screw so yes, the green ground wire to the green ground screw. Since you have a metal box which is grounded and since the metal of the outlet itself is connected to the ground lug on the receptical there is no need to connect the green screw on the receptical to ground. Hope I made this clear enough.
Ron
On the other hand, I am not a "grounding freak!". On the second floor of an all-wood house, far away from any plumbing or air ducts, or anything else that might be conductive, one may grab a hot wire with no feeling of any shock. So the need for the grounding everything is partly relative.Then that being the case run a ground wire from the outlet. I generally do just as a matter of practice even with the outlets which really do not require it. I generally place a small copper lug in my box and ground it and use an additional short wire to the outlet. I am just sort of a ground freak I guess.
Ron
Over the course of a few years and wire by endless wire I have tugged and yanked knob and tube out of this old house with the upstairs being the last to go. I guess for over 60 years this old house did fine with a hot and neutral. When I finally yanked out the old entry fuses I remember the city inspectors busting my chops about grounding. Maybe they gave me a ground freak complex? Yeah, all wood construction so when one thinks about it there is really little to no shock hazard discounting the upstairs bathroom.On the other hand, I am not a "grounding freak!". On the second floor of an all-wood house, far away from any plumbing or air ducts, or anything else that might be conductive, one may grab a hot wire with no feeling of any shock. So the need for the grounding everything is partly relative.
The "Big Benefit" of using crimp connections in a box is that they are not serviceable. You can't add a wire or make any changes without cutting them off, which may leave the wires too short! A correctly applied wire nut works better.Code requires a metal box to be grounded with an attached wire, those mounting screws for outlets and wires are not sufficient for an inspector.
Some of the outlets do have an improved ground, a copper tab impinges on the mounting screw.
So, if you use metal boxes, they must be wired with their own short ground wire to the ground wire in the romex.
Other thing, code now requires those bare metal copper sleeve crimps to join all grounds together, no more just twisting grounds together. Actually that is a good idea. I have seen twisted grounds break or come apart, then you got no grounded connections.
I asked the inspector for the rational and he said if a hot wire touches the metal box and the ground is not good, then the metal box and the mounting screws are hot, a shock hazard. Most older stuff, you wont find any such extra careful grounding and all the older stuff used metal boxes everywhere.
Plastic boxes dont have this requirement.
A lot of code requirement exists because people do dumb stuff, not careful when wiring, or other people get in there and mess around. So I suppose it might help keep someone from being electrocuted in the future, even if your work is excellent now, stuff happens.
Copper crimp sleeves for the ground wires can be opened up again.The "Big Benefit" of using crimp connections in a box is that they are not serviceable. You can't add a wire or make any changes without cutting them off, which may leave the wires too short! A correctly applied wire nut works better.
As for those who do dumb stuff, You Can't Fix Stupid!" certainly holds true in wiring as well.
Beautiful today here so my two outdoor outlets are now fully grounded.Then that being the case run a ground wire from the outlet. I generally do just as a matter of practice even with the outlets which really do not require it. I generally place a small copper lug in my box and ground it and use an additional short wire to the outlet. I am just sort of a ground freak I guess.
Ron

