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Mike M Mike M is offline
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Default Design for my garage shop

I can see where thats good business. The more people that have
something good to say about how you do business is good for repeat and
referal customers. A good reputation leads to a lot more negotiated
business and being able to sell on quality and fair price instead of
just cheap.

Mike M


On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 07:50:36 -0500, Swingman wrote:

On 3/17/2010 3:32 AM, Mike M wrote:
On Tue, 16 Mar 2010 09:36:47 -0500, wrote:


There may be one advantage (albeit slight) to wiring a "dedicated
circuit" for a stationary tool, particularly in shops in "garages" ... a
"dedicated circuit" is exempt from being GFCI protected in many locales.

At one time in the early days of GFCI, it was worth doing so as to not
have to deal with nuisance trips, which are no longer the problem they
once were.


You may be spot on this. I only do commercial industrial so I'm not
right up on residential but I believe all garage circuits require gfi.
There are exceptions for appliances and dedicated circuits. May be a
drawback garage shops, but I think most repair shops are now required
to have gfi circuits.


We are required in most municipalities where I build to have GFI
protection on all "wet area" receptacles ... this includes bathroom,
utility rooms with sinks, kitchens, garages, sun rooms with drains, and
all exterior receptacles.

We are also required to have AFCI protection on all dwelling bedroom
circuits.

On the latter, I've had homeowners who are selling a home I built when
AFCI wasn't required, or even available, and during the sale process
failed a buyer's third party inspection because lack of AFCI protection,
I've gone back and had the electrical contractor install them at our
cost ... seems like good business, and a prudent thing to do in this
litigious society.