View Single Post
  #24   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
[email protected] clare@snyder.on.ca is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 18,538
Default Question on home wiring

On Sat, 20 Dec 2008 16:59:28 -0800 (PST), terry
wrote:

On Dec 20, 6:25Â*pm, wrote:
On Fri, 19 Dec 2008 10:19:41 -0800 (PST), wrote:
I'd not want to do that. Later electricians will find mauve, purple, fuscia
and olive wires. And not know which one is hot, or neutral. For the one time
expense, I'd suggest to buy new wire, and stick to the accepted colors for
hot, ground, and neutral.


Everything in the post was "accepted colors". Nothing suggested colors
that are not "accepted".


Yeah. Â*I'd be pretty leery of an electrician that didn't understand
that setup... but then again, I'm used to dealing with electricians
that come and work on our 3-phase, 440V stuff.


Residential electricians deal with black, white, red and green. ( or
shades there-of) So grey and mauve could be black and red?


Agree.
But have met electricians who know all about current practice of how
to wire, how much slack, frequency of stapling etc. etc. but haven't
got a clue about the ratio between RMS and peak voltage, or why phase
to phase voltage is different from phase to neutral voltage, for
example in 3 phase service in a supermarket lighting sytem and have no
idea how a GFI works.



And they need to know this theory to effectivey and safely wire a
house? Residential electricians do not need to know 3 phase. And they
need to know how to wire a FFI, but do not need to know the nuts and
bolts of how it works.

That's why there are different licences - a lot of industrial
electricians would have a heck of a time wiring a house. No conduit?
No BX? The wires go THROUGH the 2X4 studs? No raceways?

How the heck am I supposed to rout the wires?