
Chuck
kayakrguy wrote:BD, Rich--your notes make me wonder if there are regional variations in the way craftsmen do their work??? Sure seems that way when you read stuff about plumbing/electrical/construction stuff. I mean that while electricians will follow NEC and local codes, HOW they do that may differ from place to place?
Jim
kayakrguy wrote:The recent notes confirm something I found out when I re-visited my receptacles. First, mine do NOT have springs clamps for back-wiring with solid wire. Instead, there is an INTERNAL clamp that closes when you turn the screw on the side of the outlet
Leon wrote:kayakrguy wrote:The recent notes confirm something I found out when I re-visited my receptacles. First, mine do NOT have springs clamps for back-wiring with solid wire. Instead, there is an INTERNAL clamp that closes when you turn the screw on the side of the outlet
That is a "back wire" type and stranded can be put into that style clamp area and secured by tightening the screw. That type of termination "cages" the wire and is much different than putting it under a screw head where it would get a twisting motion.
I'll bet if you carefully drilled the plastic hole a little larger, you could get a #10 wire in there and the clamp would clamp it tightkayakrguy wrote:I don't want to be picky, but my original inquiry was about # 10 stranded Wire and, simply stated, you couldn't put a # 10 stranded wire in the back wire hole any more than your could stick a....well, you get the drift...
kayakrguy wrote:Bd is right...if you don't wire downstream correctly, you can lose the GFCI protection downstream from the GFCI receptacle e.g. keep the black power wire on the brass terminal, the white wire on the steel terminal and green wire on the green screw...if you reverse the black and white or don't connect the green, you don't get GFCI downstream.
The GFCI's I have obviously are NOT intended for # 10 stranded wire.
They only have the screw, no metal clamp so it looks like they are intended for household, solid copper installation--no surprise they are from HD....
Two points I's like to hear about...1) When wiring my house, I always used #12 solid wire and all circuits were 20 AMP (heavy use, like appliances had dedicated circuits--the old Victorian we had originally had two circuits for the whole house--I put 11 in the kitchen?pantry alone!![]()
Anyhow, my electrical inspector said that solid copper was used almost exclusively for residential applications and stranded wire was the norm in commercial wiring--true??
kayakrguy wrote:
2) I have ALWAYS understood that you NEVER connect a smaller wire (say a #12) downstream from a larger, less resistance wire (say a #10) unless the smaller wire is protected by a fuse/circuit breaker. To me that is a no brainer but sometimes what is said on the board makes me wonder if people use that rule???
kayakrguy wrote:
Thanks again, everybody for the help...I am off to get some wire <G>
Jim
bobhenry wrote:I know I'll catch flack from someone but I used a heavy weight ( 12 gage)
3 strand extention cord in orange for all ac runs .
kayakrguy wrote:...Hereabouts (South Central Jersey) you see a lot of metal wall plates for switches--something I never, ever saw in NY, PA, MA or Canada...
I was surprised that metal plates would even be allowed in the NEC...
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest