Conduit: Difference between revisions
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It is best practice to run invididual THHN wires inside conduit. Thus it appears that for part degeneracy, one may strip THHN wires from Romex [https://wesbellwireandcable.com/blog/thhn-vs-romex/#:~:text=Romex%C2%AE%20cables%20typically%20consist,panels%20to%20appliances%20and%20lights.], and run them inside conduit. This can apply to hardwired plugs if one doesn't have multistrand THHN wire - where stiff wire is ok if conduit length is short, such as a hardwire whip. This could free one from having to source 14, 12, 10, and 6 ga multistrand wires - and enabpling one to make hardwire whips from the same Romex used in other wiring. This makes a good case for electrical part degeneracy with the Seed Eco-Home. | It is best practice to run invididual THHN wires inside conduit. Thus it appears that for part degeneracy, one may strip THHN wires from Romex [https://wesbellwireandcable.com/blog/thhn-vs-romex/#:~:text=Romex%C2%AE%20cables%20typically%20consist,panels%20to%20appliances%20and%20lights.], and run them inside conduit. This can apply to hardwired plugs if one doesn't have multistrand THHN wire - where stiff wire is ok if conduit length is short, such as a hardwire whip. This could free one from having to source 14, 12, 10, and 6 ga multistrand wires - and enabpling one to make hardwire whips from the same Romex used in other wiring. This makes a good case for electrical part degeneracy with the Seed Eco-Home. | ||
Thus, conduit-clad whips in the OSE case can utilizer LFMC to keep redundancy for both exterior, interior, and appliance wiring. | |||
#Heat pump: can do 10 ga in [[LFNC]] | |||
#PV: THHN multistrand + [[LFMC]] required, as wiring inside walls must be metallic. |
Revision as of 01:43, 29 April 2024
It is best practice to run invididual THHN wires inside conduit. Thus it appears that for part degeneracy, one may strip THHN wires from Romex [1], and run them inside conduit. This can apply to hardwired plugs if one doesn't have multistrand THHN wire - where stiff wire is ok if conduit length is short, such as a hardwire whip. This could free one from having to source 14, 12, 10, and 6 ga multistrand wires - and enabpling one to make hardwire whips from the same Romex used in other wiring. This makes a good case for electrical part degeneracy with the Seed Eco-Home.
Thus, conduit-clad whips in the OSE case can utilizer LFMC to keep redundancy for both exterior, interior, and appliance wiring.