12v Emergency Light
I have a battery operated 12v emergency light located in my basement. It has two lamps on it. I would like to remove one of them and place it upstairs in my dining room to cover that and the living room. I have some old 14/3 SO cable lying around and wondered if you guys thought if it would be acceptable to use this. Also, can I run this in the wall cavity as long as my terminations are inside the box where I mount the light? Is there any part of the code that covers this or any violation of the code?
Thanks, Rick Similar Tutorials
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Hey guys and gals,
got a very odd dilemma, in my dining room there is a chandelier lamp that is controlled through a dimmer switch(even though it is not a dimmer). There is also a closet with a light switch as well. The odd circumstance i am having is when the closet light is on(via its own switch), and you turn on the dinning room light, the closet light goes out. Then if you turn the dining room light off,the closet light turns back on. The closest light switch has zero effect on the dining room light, the dining room light seems to have control over the closet light and dining room light. Any ideas on a fix. I was thing just replacing the dimmer(once again does not actually dim) with a single pole interrupter. I just dont want to burn my house down
Hi All.
Well, we moved into a house with finished basement, but my wife 'had' given me full jurisdiction over the basement. So, I decided to install nice, recessed lighting into the basement recreation room. I put in the halogen potlights (50W) with dimmers, so that they can be adjusted. However, my wife can't stand the intensity of the lights but this is how they are. Do they sell covers for these so that I can cover it up to cut off the intensity (similar to camera flashes)? Please let me know if you have a recommendation. Thanks!!
just wondering if someone can give me a quick answer. I currently have 7 receptacles and 3 lights on one circuit. the receptacles are in the living room and the lights are in the basement. I have just installed 6 recessed lights in the living room. does anyone think that that is too much to add to the circuit. not much gets plugged in in the living room T.V. couple of lamps dvd player, occasional vacuum cleaner.
My existing service entrance consists of an external Meter can mounted on the outside of the garage wall directly behind a SD Main Breaker Panel (MBP) with a 150 amp main breaker. In order to support upgrades, I am installing a second MBP (200 amp) inside the garage in the wall cavity right next to the existing panel.
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i have 3 switch sets in my house that are giving me absolute fits.
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I have a covered (rafters, decking, shingles, etc) screen room out back. It used to have a single light, which I wanted to replace with a ceiling fan with light kit, independently switched. So I bought this fan/light dimmer: http://www.lowes.com/pd_69955-539-S2...d=10151&rpp=24
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I completed my whole house rewire last Fall (took 2 years and severely tested my wife's patience). I read 5 wiring books in the early stages but read Rex Cauldwell's Wiring a House with his above code suggestions near the end of the project and now im obsessing about some of the stuff I didnt do. What do you guys think of some of the suggestions, specifically,
1. Driving 8 ground rods and the wire must be continuous (I drove 4 but the #6 copper wire from the panel to rod 1 is 1 wire and the #6 wire from rod 1 through rod 4 is another wire but both are properly clampled to rod 1 with an acord clamp). Funny, even with 4 rods there is almost no current through the rods versus 2-3 amps through the traditional cold water pipe ground 2. 1 circuit for each duplex receptacle in bathrooms. Since I have a quad in each of the batchrooms, that would be 4 circuits instead of 1 (code allows an unlimited number of bathroom receptacles on one circuit which does seem odd) 3. Nothing shared with kitchen counter receptacles (ie kitchen wall and dining room on their own) 4. Dedicated circuits for everything - I added dedicted circuit for fridge, microwave and dishwasher/disposer, but did not separate the dishwasher disposer onto 2 circuits. There used to be what I called "Circuit X" which did kitchen counter, microwave, dishwasher, disposer, fridge, 2 kitchen counter outlets, dining room and 1 outside outlet. Wife frequently blew that one. Circuit X was divided into at least 5 circuits during the rewire 5. No switch loops - did 5 of these to save on carpentry/avoid certain box fill problems. Now 2011 code says no switch loops without a neutral. Oops? Just wondering what you guys think.
Morning people. I'm installing a chimney style range hood for a friend of mine and he wants me to leave the plug wire on instead of hard wiring it. This would be permanent. Reason being is so he could remove it himself at a future date to tile the wall. This means I'd have to put a receptacle on the wall next to the vertical duct and it would be hidden behind the vent stack cover. It wouldn't be easily accesable so I'm thinking that's a code violation anywhere you go. From what I found it's a grey area. Any thoughts? Thanks
Going through a crazy heat wave here in SoCal, and one of my tenants called to tell me that the electricity isn't on in some of his rooms. He turned on his portable AC unit that he has been using all summer and something may have happened.
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