Title: ELECTRICAL WIRING
1ELECTRICAL WIRING
Written by Bobby Joslin
GA Ag Ed Curriculum Office To accompany the
Georgia Agriculture Curriculum Lesson
01422-6.2 July 2002
2STANDARDS FOR SAFETY
- National Electrical Code
- Local Electrical Code
- Power Company Requirements
- Underwriters Laboratory (UL)
3 NATIONAL ELECTRICAL CODE
- History of the National Electrical Code
- Purpose of the NEC
- How Often the NEC is updated
- Scope of the NEC
- Enforcement of the NEC
- Using the NEC
4LOCAL ELECTRICAL CODES
- Local authorities may adopt NEC
- May adopt NEC with modifications
- Local wiring permits and inspections
5POWER COMPANY REQUIREMENTS
6UNDERWRITERS LABORATORY
- UL Listed assures product meets minimum safety
standards - UL Listed does not mean that product is safe for
all installations - UL Listed is not an indication of quality
7BRANCH CIRCUITS
- Definition of circuit
- Definition of branch circuit
8BRANCH CIRCUITS IN A RESIDENCE
- Individual Circuit
- Small Appliance Circuit
- Laundry Circuit
- Bathroom Circuit
- General Purpose Circuit
9INDIVIDUAL CIRCUIT
- Supplies only one outlet or piece of equipment
- Motors 1/2 horsepower or larger
- All 240 volt equipment
- Other equipment such as furnace fan, freezer,
television, computer
10SMALL APPLIANCE CIRCUIT
- Serves receptacles for small appliance loads
- At least two required by NEC
- Must be 20 ampere circuits
- No lighting outlets
- Cannot serve any other room in house
11LAUNDRY CIRCUIT
- Serves only receptacles in laundry room
- At least one required by NEC
- Must be 20 ampere circuit
- May not have lighting outlets
- May not serve outlets in any other room of house
12BATHROOM CIRCUIT
- Circuit to serve receptacles in bathroom
- At least one required by NEC
- Must be 20 ampere circuit
- May not serve lighting outlets
- May not serve any other room in house
13GENERAL PURPOSE CIRCUITS
- Serve all lighting outlets in home
- Serve all receptacles not on one of the other
types of circuits - May be 15 or 20 ampere (20 ampere preferred)
- Allow at least one general purpose circuit for
every 500 square feet of floor space in house
14Determining the Kind, Number and Location of
Outlets and Switches in a Wiring System
15Lighting Outlet Requirements
- At least one wall switch controlled outlet in
every habitable room in house - Stairways consisting of 6 or more steps must have
lighting outlet that is wall switch controlled at
both floor levels - Attics, underfloor space, utility room and
basement requirements
16RECEPTACLE OUTLET REQUIREMENTS
- No point along the floor line in any wall space
may be more than 6 feet from a receptacle in
kitchen, family room, dining room, living room,
den, sun room, bedroom, recreation room, or
similar room - (Receptacles must be no farther than _____ feet
apart.)
17RECEPTACLE REQUIREMENTS
- A receptacle must be installed at each kitchen
and dining area counter space if the space is
wider than 12 inches - No point along the wall line of a kitchen counter
may be more than 24 inches from a receptacle - (Receptacles must be no farther than _____
inches apart)
18RECEPTACLE REQUIREMENTS
- At least one receptacle is required within 36
inches of the outside edge of each basin in
bathrooms. - All receptacles in bathrooms must have ground
fault circuit interrupter protection
19RECEPTACLE REQUIREMENTS
- At least one outdoor receptacle is required
- All outdoor receptacles must have GFCI protection
- Outdoor receptacles must be installed in
waterproof boxes
20RECEPTACLE REQUIREMENTS
- At least one receptacle is required in the
laundry area - At least one receptacle is required in a
basement. All general use receptacles in an
unfinished basement must have GFCI protection
21RECEPTACLE REQUIREMENTS
- At least one receptacle is required in hallways
10 feet or more in length - Effective January 1, 2002, all receptacles in a
bedroom must have arc-fault circuit interrupter
protection
22RECOMMENDATIONS FOR OUTLETS AND SWITCHES
- Receptacles should generally be located
approximately above floor line - Receptacles preferably should be located near the
ends of wall space - Lighting outlets in closets should be wall switch
controlled - Pull chain lighting outlets should be minimized,
if used at all
23RECOMMENDATIONS FOR OUTLETS AND SWITCHES
- Wall switches should be generally be located
approximately 48 inches above the floor line and
on the latch side of doors - Three and four way switches should be used to
control lights in locations such as rooms having
more than one entrance, stairways, halls,
basement, covered walkways between the house and
garage, etc.
24Determining the Number of Outlets On a General
Purpose Circuit
- For calculation purposes, estimate a load of at
least 1.5 amps per outlet on the circuit - To determine the maximum number of outlets on a
20 amp general purpose circuit 20 amps (circuit
rating) ? 1.5 amps 13 outlets (maximum)
on the circuit - Maximum number of outlets on a 15 amp general
purpose circuit ________?
25SELECTING SERVICE ENTRANCE EQUIPMENT
- Service conductors
- Service mast
- Entrance head or weather head
- Meter base
- Service entrance cable
26Service Entrance Panel
- Purpose
- Factors to consider when selecting the service
entrance panel - Type of panel
- Size or ampere rating
- Circuit capacity or number of spaces for
connecting circuits
27PROVIDING OVERCURRENT PROTECTION
- Providing a means to interrupt an electrical
circuit when the amperage in the circuit becomes
excessive - Reasons for providing overcurrent protection
28SIZE OF OVERCURRENT PROTECTION DEVICE TO USE
29PLANNING ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS
30CLASSIFICATION OF CONDUCTORS
- Grounded conductor
- Ungrounded conductor
- Equipment grounding conductor
- Grounding electrode conductor
31Grounded Conductor
- A current carrying conductor that is connected to
the earth - Often called the neutral wire
- Color must be white or natural gray
- Known as identified conductor
- Identity must be maintained throughout a circuit
and the electrical system
32Grounded Conductor
- NEVER connected to a fuse, circuit breaker, or a
switch - One grounded conductor must be connected to all
120 volt outlets or equipment
33UNGROUNDED CONDUCTOR
- A current carrying conductor that is not
connected to the earth - Often called the hot wire
- Color should not be white, gray, or green. Color
may be black, red, blue, etc. - Circuit breakers (or fuses) and switches are
placed on the ungrounded conductor
34UNGROUNDED CONDUCTOR
- One ungrounded conductor must be connected to all
120 volt outlets or equipment. - Two ungrounded conductors must be connected to
all 240 volt outlets or equipment.
35EQUIPMENT GROUNDING CONDUCTOR
- Under normal conditions, the equipment grounding
conductor is never a current carrying conductor.
It serves as a path to ground if a fault occurs
in electrical equipment or the electrical system - May be a bare wire or may have green or green
with yellow stripe insulation
36EQUIPMENT GROUNDING CONDUCTOR
- Always connected to the grounding terminal of
devices (receptacles, switches, etc.) - Always connected to non-current carrying metal
parts of equipment and circuits (including all
metal boxes)
37GROUNDING ELECTRODE CONDUCTOR
- The large bare copper wire that connects the
electrical system to the grounding electrode - Size is determined by the size of service
entrance cable being used
38COLOR CODING OF ELECTRICAL CONNECTIONS
- Silver or white colored terminal - attach the
grounded conductor - Copper or brass colored terminal -attach the
ungrounded conductor - Green colored terminal - attach the equipment
grounding conductor