Thread: Outside Wiring
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DerbyDad03 DerbyDad03 is offline
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Default Outside Wiring

On Feb 12, 9:44*am, "Blattus Slafaly £ ¥ 0/00 "
wrote:
Robert11 wrote:
Hello,


I plan on installing a flood light above my Deck.
There is presently a small outside light about six feet above the Deck, so
with the new floodlight
mounted about the height of the second story, we are talking a vertical run
of perhaps ten feet or so. *Would connect at the present small Deck light
box.


My first thought was to run the wire in the normal grey plastic conduit, or
perhaps snake it inside the
wall, somehow.


But I realized that the normal house service 220 V wires run from the
vertical power line drop to the
inside of the house opposite the service box in the basement, so apparently
it is code-compliant to run the correct type of
electrical wiring vertically on the outside of the house siding without
being in conduit.


The simplest thing would of course be for me to just run a suitable wire
against the siding on the outside, without any conduit.


What are the code requirements for this application (simple 110 V, 14 gage
wire) ?
I doubt that the regular NM-14 has an appropriate sheathing for this
application ?


What type of wire is code approved for this type of application, and what
would I want ?


Any caveats or not apparent or obvious Code requirements ?


I do have some NM wire approved for direcdt ground burial (per the label on
the box)
Sure does have a tough outer sheath.
Would this be O.K., perhaps ?


Whatever I do, i want to be 100% sure that it is Code compliant.


Much thanks, as always,
Bob


Out of sight, out of mind. I would go up the inside wall to the attic
and out where my new light would go.

--
Blattus Slafaly *? 3 * * *7/8- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


I would go up the inside wall to the attic and out where my new
light would go

Where possible, this is not a bad idea. Unfortunately, this is not
always feasible.

The front & rear exterior walls of my house are not accessible via the
attic. The ceiling in the bedrooms slant down, following the rafters,
leaving about 3 inches of wall above the windows. The soffit is right
above the window. To place a fixture on an exterior wall, you would
have to go through the wall in the living space. Doable, but a lot
more work than conduit.