Home Electrical Wiring
Use The Right Wire Size
Introduction:
Electrical wire
has been in use in home construction for over 100
years.
Electrical wiring refers to insulated
conductors
used to carry
electric current to electrical devices in your
home. Modern homes and the high use of electrical
appliances can typically have several miles of
electrical wiring strung throughout the home.
If you are a DIY handyman that has the skill to do
your own wiring you should be familiar with the
different types of home electrical wiring and the
code that applies to standard household wiring.
Your home wiring can deteriorate overtime and
increase the risk of fire due to electrical shorts
or current overloads. For safety purposes
electrical wire safety codes were developed in the
1880s as electrical power companies and
distribution systems were developed to bring
electric power to nearly every home. The codes for
electrical wire are set locally and by a national
standard electric code.
Residential electrical wiring safety codes are
intended to allow the most effective transfer of
electrical energy while at the same time preventing
damage or injury due to electrical shock or fire.
The code provides for technical standards for
materials and installation standards.
Electrical Wire Types:
Most circuits in the modern homes are wired with
non-metallic sheathed cable, often referred to by
the brand name Romex. This type of cable is the
least expensive for a given size and is used for
dry indoor applications. The designation NM XX-Y
indicates, respectively, the type of sheathing (NM
means non-metallic), the size of the conductors
(XX), and (Y) the total number of wire conductors
less the ground conductor.
For example: A NM 14-2 cable Romex cable is
a 14 gauge cable that contains three conductors
(two plus one ground). The14 gauge cable is used
for most of the electrical circuits in the home
that are less the 15 amps.
Circuits with larger currents such as furnaces,
boilers, heat pumps, water heaters, air
conditioners, and electric heat circuits use a
dedicated 12 gauge cable. The 12 gauge cable is
limited to 20 amps by the code.
Dedicated
means there is only one electrical device on the
circuit.
The NM cable conductor insulation is color-coded
for identification. There is one black, one white,
and a bare (sometimes green) grounding conductor.
The code specifies that the black conductor as the
hot conductor, the white conductor is the neutral,
and the bare or green is the grounding conductor.
For 240 volt applications not requiring a neutral
conductor, the white wire is used as the second hot
conductor, but must be re-colored with tape or by
some other method.
For four-wire equipment there is a red
conductor. For example, a light circuit that has
more than one on/off switch uses a NM 14-3 cable
that has a black, white, red, and a bare/green
ground conductor.
Aluminum electrical wiring:
It is worth mentioning that aluminum wiring was
used in the 1970s. Aluminum wiring became
implicated in numerous house fires because of the
improper installation technique. Most local codes
no longer allow the use of aluminum wire for new
home construction. If for some reason your local
code does not limit its use, I recommend that you
avoid the use of any aluminum electrical wire in
your home.
Electrical wire sizes and current limits:
Wire size is expressed by gauge, inversely. For
example, a 12 gauge wire is larger than a14 gauge
wire. The wire diameter approximately doubles in
size for every increase in six gauge sizes. Use 14
gauge wires on 15 amp circuits, 12 gauge on 20 amp
circuits, and 10 gauge on 30 amp circuits.
These are the basic home wiring codes that a DIY
homeowner should be familiar with before attempting
a home electrical wiring job. Consult your building
code officer or the national building electric code
for more information.
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