Rg 6/u Or Something Else ?
Hello, I'm roughing in 5 rooms and it's time to do the cable boxes. I was thinking of using RG 6/U in each room with home runs for every room.
I'm not sure really what to use. This is rental property, and some tenants use Satelite, some use "Charter" and all use High Speed Internet. I'm thinking of also installing Cat 5E or 6 in same box. I only want to do this once since I can't pull it out once installed. Not sure about telephone, probably cable, but I might run some 22/4 in same box just in case. Hopefully crosstalk will not be an issue. Any help or ideas would be appreciated. Thanks. Similar Tutorials
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I have a 15 amp circuit feeding a bathroom and I want to upgrade it to a 20. Can this be done without opening up the sheet rock walls and space between the first story ceiling and second story flooring?
It was wired, when it was code in the early 90's, with #14. I am thinking that I could go from station to station and connect the end of the new 12 to the end of the old 14, and then pull it through BUT PERHAPS FOR STAPLING, assuming the cable is stapled every foot and a half. If it is, and the run isn't too long, is it often possible to just tug on the cable to loosen the staples? Assuming that can be done, do I have to open up the walls and ceiling to staple the new #12 cable to the framing. I am trying hard to avoid opening the drywall. The newer paint in this particular room is impossible to match and I would have to repaint the entire room should I have to cut the wall.
Greetings,
I am looking to wire a sub-panel in my barn to support a general workshop. Loads would include standard woodworking tools (including 220V table saw), welding, air compressor, etc. The house has 200AMP main breaker and minimal in-house loads. Dryer is gas, Oven and cooktop are gas. Water heater is off the oil furnace. I think the biggest single load is the well-pump and/or fridge compressor. We do have sporadic toaster oven, hairdryers etc. Otherwise its just lights, ceiling fans, flat-panel tv, stereo... We had 4" conduit installed to the barn, so there is plenty of room to pull a big cable. The entire run from the house panel to the barn totals around 155' (probably less, but rounding up) My questions a Can I pull a 100AMP sub-panel from my main house panel as described? Would 4/0,4/0,4/0,2/0 aluminum service entrance cable be a good choice for this run? Could I do it with something lighter? Could I put an additional sub-panel in the garage (about halfway to the barn) by interrupting the run? The garage subpanel would have a 220V plug for possible welding and/or electric car charging. Would this require a separate run? Are there any other considerations I should be thinking about in planning this? Thanks for any thoughts you can share on this! Cheers, pete
I am renovating my modest home's living room, but, since the walls and ceiling are basically stripped bare, I would like to consider "toys and luxuries" which would need to be wired in upfront here, such as ipad syncing controls for stereo or lighting, decent built-in speaker systems, etc. What kinds of devices are contemporary homes incorporating nowadays? I am not super-nerdy, but a couple "gee whiz" devices might be fun to have! Suggestions? Thanks in advance.
Just pulled 7 home runs for kitchen remod. All come across the attic and come out in a 1.5" hole in a rafter blocking. I have about 15' hanging on each 12-2.
The problem is I have farther than 24" to get into the panel, so i dont get the nipple exception to my conduit. Since they're required to be 20A (except the lughing circuit?) i dont have any room for derating. Is my only choice to run three separate EMT 3/4" and drill new holes in the side of my panel? Edit: would a junction help me at all?
Help! We decided to raise the ceiling in our kitchen for some new taller cabinets. We have 30" cabinets with a 7' drop ceiling. By taking out the drop ceiling we can go to an 8' ceiling with 36" cabinets. We just had the ceiling taken out and now I see I got a problem!
This is a 2 story home, the wall in question is a load bearing wall (runs through the center of the house) The main breaker panel is in this wall (the panel opening is in the adjacent family room) As you can see in the photos I cannot extend the wall up because all of the home wiring is in the way! I expected I might have to run longer wires but not this. Some ideas we've thought about... notch the double 2x4s (not sure how much I need to notch or allowed to) build a cove (box) and leave the wires like they are (might be an eyesore in our new kitchen) put up a large crown moulding along the entire wall (would be the only crown moulding in the house) extend the ceiling up 6-7" instead of 12" (should leave enough room for wire to stay) I'm leaning to the notching option if I can find a way to reinforce that section. Any ideas? thanks!
I am thinking of purchasing a WineKoolr used but after looking at the manual online it states that it must be plugged into a "Dedicated separately fused, grounded, 15 amp 100-120v line." The price I can get this at is awesome, but I live in apartment and am not sure, but think I only have 1 dedicated line at all, for the fridge. The previous owners said they just had it plugged into a normal outlet fine, but I want to know if it is a serious issue to do this? I really want a nice cooler for my beer cellar since I have no actual basement, so I am really hoping I can make this work in my home. Thanks for any help!
*Someone asked me on another forum what breakers I have for where I want to install it, and its in my second bedroom. The breaker for those outlets is a 15A. They also said that it probably says that in the manual to cover themselves legally but I should likely be just fine. ** Well I turned off the breakers until I found which was for the outlets in the spare room. As far as I can tell, the only things on this circuit are the spare bedroom outlets (not the lights), and 1 outlet in the hallway. Nothing is plugged into any of these and its a 20A circuit.
Each time someone drives by my house using a cell phone it seems there is a one-time clicking noise coming out of several of my electrical outlets. It may happen in all rooms at the same time but of course, the only ones I notice are in the room I am in currently.
Any ideas, and thanks!
I've been the owner of a 1930s era Colonial Revival that our first major project is to rewire the house. We have a 100A main box that is maxed out, a combination of cloth 2-wire, flex, and some cracking Romex along with some downright dangerous open wiring in the basement, tapped wiring in the kitchen and study, some gangboxes that were wallpapered over in the bedrooms that we assume were wall lights (we have similar wall lights in the bathrooms), inadequate outlets in most rooms, no GFI. Etc. Etc. In addition the bathrooms are small and lack wall switches or outlets (they have two pull-cord wall lamps, with one lamp with a outlet.
Here is a floor plan with electrical represented on the ground and second floor. Still working on mapping the basement and the attic (which has a 3/4 converted finished "bonus" room. My Father-In-Law who is a licensed electrician has promised to gracefully donate a couple months of his time to rewire everything. Also a bonus in this is the majority of outlets are mounted on the baseboard trim and not in the plaster. My plans are to go with a single 200A main, likely double the amount of outlets in each room, GFI where needed. While I know some basics, I want to familiarize myself a bit more on what is the best approach to rewire. For instance should I look at running conduit in just one spot of the house, or should I run two on each end of the house? I plan to do some major remodeling of some rooms in the future, especially the kitchen and bath so what are the best ways to ensure I have an easier time with these remodels?
Our pool was installed 10 years ago and we need to change the 3 underwater lights because they are leaking. The cable for each light box goes through a conduit and up to a "deck Box" or junction box per code so water from pool can't run up to the box. In order to change the lights we need to locate the box and pull the wires out, then feed the wires through for the new light. The problem is that one of the boxes seems to be missing. That light sits under a stone waterfall and there is a planting area behind the waterfall. Ive searched under all the bushes and even done a bit of digging but cant find the box. I'm wondering if there is some smarter way to locate it.
I tried a metal detector but there were too many false alarms from every metal scrap the work men left behind. I was wondering if there is something that could be fed through the conduit to junction box that would send a signal allowing it to be located. I know the cesspool guys use something like that and thought maybe an electrician might have a similar tool. The new lights are completely different than the old ones so we can't just change out one. if we can;t change this light we can;t change any of them and the whole project goes down the drain. Any suggestion would be greatly appreciated.
Hello.
my electricity bills have been sky high for as long as i have been keeping track of them (less than 2 years). i finally decided to try to track down the culprit. I bought a watt meter to find phatom loads. I found some and took care of them However, The electric hot water tank has got me thinking. Could this be the cause of high utility bills? The tank itself is ancient (RHEEM). By the way it is rented from the utility company. it is hard to tell the age because there is no date stamp, and the model number does not come up on the internet at all. If i were to guess, maybe 25 years easily. It functions in that I get hot water no problem 1. Is it possible that the electric HWT consumes way more energy than it should?, and how? 2. Is there a way to track the usage? My utility company installed a smart meter last year, and required an upgrade to get a new circiut breaker panel from old fuses thanks |