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Classic66s December 16th 05 01:54 AM

Romex wiring
 
I am finishing an office in my basement and have never worked with
Romex before. I always did the conduit and wire method. I installed
outlets in an office I built and hooked the circuit to a hot line.
When I checked the outlets they all said open ground except the last
one in line and it showed correctly wired. That one has the ground
wire connected right to the outlets grren screw. The outlets in
between the correct one and where I hooked into the power all say open
ground. I just twisted the ground wire together and continued down the
line. I take it that is incorrect? Please advise.


ameijers December 16th 05 02:25 AM

Romex wiring
 

"Classic66s" wrote in message
ups.com...
I am finishing an office in my basement and have never worked with
Romex before. I always did the conduit and wire method. I installed
outlets in an office I built and hooked the circuit to a hot line.
When I checked the outlets they all said open ground except the last
one in line and it showed correctly wired. That one has the ground
wire connected right to the outlets grren screw. The outlets in
between the correct one and where I hooked into the power all say open
ground. I just twisted the ground wire together and continued down the
line. I take it that is incorrect? Please advise.


Um, lessee- you didn't use metal conduit, you didn't put the ground wire
from each run under the romex clamp on the box (assuming it was a metal
box), you didn't pigtail the ground off to the screw on all but the last
outlet....

Where did you expect those outlets to ground TO? If you used the now-typical
blue plastic boxes, those outlets are pretty well isolated from any ground
path.

Go back to each box, undo the wirenut on the ground wire, add a pigtail to
the green screw on the outlet, and reapply the wirenut. Assuming you got the
polarity right on the outlets, your tester should show green lights.

aem sends....


Colbyt December 16th 05 02:27 AM

Romex wiring
 

"Classic66s" wrote in message
ups.com...
I am finishing an office in my basement and have never worked with
Romex before. I always did the conduit and wire method. I installed
outlets in an office I built and hooked the circuit to a hot line.
When I checked the outlets they all said open ground except the last
one in line and it showed correctly wired. That one has the ground
wire connected right to the outlets grren screw. The outlets in
between the correct one and where I hooked into the power all say open
ground. I just twisted the ground wire together and continued down the
line. I take it that is incorrect? Please advise.


Twisting them together is fine using a wire nut but there needs to be a
pigtail connection to the green screw or the outlet remains ungrounded. The
fact that the last outlet is grounded indicates you have otherwise proper
connections.

Wire nut is required even on the bare wire as there should be no open ends
of bare wire in the box. This may not be enforced in your area as crimp
connectors have become more widely used.

Colbyt



Member, Takoma Park Volunteer Fire Department December 16th 05 02:38 AM

Romex wiring
 
Classic66s wrote:
I am finishing an office in my basement and have never worked with
Romex before. I always did the conduit and wire method. I installed
outlets in an office I built and hooked the circuit to a hot line.
When I checked the outlets they all said open ground except the last
one in line and it showed correctly wired. That one has the ground
wire connected right to the outlets grren screw. The outlets in
between the correct one and where I hooked into the power all say open
ground. I just twisted the ground wire together and continued down the
line. I take it that is incorrect? Please advise.


When wiring a box with Romex you leave ten inches of bare Equipment
Grounding Conductor (EGC) to each cable. You wrap one around the box
bonding screw and one around the grounding screw on the receptacle or
other device and then you splice them together. If there are multiple
devices in the box you splice a four inch pig tail or jumper for each
device in with the EGCs and then connect the jumpers to the individual
device grounding screws. The EGC from the power source is looped around
the box bonding screw prior to the splice.

If you no longer have enough wire to loop then splice the EGCs from each
cable to jumpers for each device and one for the box.
--
Tom Horne

buffalobill December 16th 05 03:52 AM

Romex wiring
 
http://www.faqs.org/faqs/electrical-wiring/part1/


Robertm December 16th 05 04:25 AM

Romex wiring
 

"buffalobill" wrote in message
oups.com...
http://www.faqs.org/faqs/electrical-wiring/part1/


I notice it says you must use lineman's pliers for twisting wires together.
However, I've watched several electricians stick two wires into a wirenut
and twist them together without twisting them together with pliers first.
Other electricians do use the pliers first then slap the wirenut on. Is one
method better than the other?

Bob



Chris Lewis December 16th 05 07:18 AM

Romex wiring
 
According to Robertm :

"buffalobill" wrote in message
oups.com...
http://www.faqs.org/faqs/electrical-wiring/part1/


I notice it says you must use lineman's pliers for twisting wires together.
However, I've watched several electricians stick two wires into a wirenut
and twist them together without twisting them together with pliers first.
Other electricians do use the pliers first then slap the wirenut on. Is one
method better than the other?


[I wrote the FAQ]

The real answer is follow the instructions on the box. There are some
wirenuts these days that should not be pretwisted. If there are
no instructions, twist the wires first with pliers - that is the
standard way, unless the instructions tell you otherwise.
--
Chris Lewis, Una confibula non set est
It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them.

[email protected] December 17th 05 04:31 AM

Romex wiring
 
On Thu, 15 Dec 2005 22:25:34 -0600, "Robertm"
wrote:


"buffalobill" wrote in message
roups.com...
http://www.faqs.org/faqs/electrical-wiring/part1/


I notice it says you must use lineman's pliers for twisting wires together.
However, I've watched several electricians stick two wires into a wirenut
and twist them together without twisting them together with pliers first.
Other electricians do use the pliers first then slap the wirenut on. Is one
method better than the other?

Bob


Dont even think of using any other type of plyers. If it says "use
lineman's plyers" and you dont use them, there is a automatic sensor
and signal device in the wirenuts that sense whether a lineman's
plyers was used. If not, it calls the FBI as soon as you twist it on
the wire. Violate the rules, and you will be arrested and imprisoned.
Your home with the improper wiring will be condemned, and levelled
using explosives while you are still in prison. When you are released,
your home will be gone.


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