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shooterschmidty 05-19-2016 10:02 PM

House electrical wiring
 
Since this forum seems to know, or at least have an opinion, about everything I figured I'd ask you all about home electrical wiring. I'm looking to add a couple of circuits for recessed lighting in two rooms, a garbage disposal, some outlets, a vent fan and a ceiling fan. I got a quote from an electrician at nearly $2k, not including fixtures, which seems a little ridiculous. I'd like to just do it myself but have a couple of concerns. First, permitting. My county requires a permit and inspection for ANY addition of high or low voltage electrical wire, to the extent that you technically need a permit for speaker wire. That being said, from talking to coworkers and electricians, it sounds as if no one ever actually gets a permit and just does the work. Does anyone have any experience in this area? The second concern is related to the first. Although I'm very confident that I can safely and effectively do this, I've heard anecdotally that if I do the wiring myself rather than hiring a licensed electrician that my insurance company could potentially use that as grounds to reject my claim if I ever have a house fire. I think that has a very low probability, but potentially catastrophic consequences. As far as I can tell, my policy doesn't discuss it other than requiring "due diligence". Thoughts?

codrus 05-19-2016 10:12 PM

As a middle ground, in a lot of places it is possible to do the work yourself and just have it signed off by a licensed electrician. That way you're paying him for his knowledge, rather than paying him for labor to cut holes in walls and crawl under the house running wire.

--Ian

Monk 05-19-2016 10:14 PM

1 Attachment(s)
This is invaluable:
https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1463710463


It covers code considerations, and has excellent pictures.
How old is your home?

shooterschmidty 05-19-2016 10:28 PM


Originally Posted by Monk (Post 1332949)
How old is your home?

It's pretty old, built in 1959, but it was partially updated by a previous owner. The breaker box is modern and has space available for me to add my circuits.

Monk 05-19-2016 10:41 PM

Unless you've owned the home for 1o years or so, it would be hard to prove any work wasn't done by the PO in the event of a fire.
I've never seen an electrical fire in a properly installed system, but I suppose shit sometimes happens.
Ask your commissioner for peace of mind. Permits are usually cheap, and Codrus is correct in saying electrician approval is sufficient in many cases.

Erat 05-20-2016 08:35 AM

What the city don't know won't hurt them.
Don't give them any reasons to know.


Monk 05-20-2016 10:29 AM

Says the guy from Detroit :giggle:

3rdCarMX5 05-24-2016 01:29 PM

I have experience with permitting and inspection, in CA. I installed a 240v 60amp service panel 80ft across my yard and wired the shop. The permit was under the construction of the building, but required burial of conduit and installation of the panels.

I can tell you that the hardest part was finding out what my local codes were, they can vary from city to city or year to year. I just called the head guy and discussed my plan with him. He wouldn't outright tell me how to do it, but would tell me the acceptable standard. I wired it up like a properly built wiring harness with labels. junctions, proper gauge wire, and wire routing/securing. The guy inspected it all in 20 minutes and remarked that it was better than some of the "professional" jobs he had approved. Then he just wanted to talk about cars. The moral of the story is that if the job is big enough, don't be afraid to pull a permit. If it is a light in a closet, just do it.

y8s 05-24-2016 02:12 PM

codes are generally easy to find online.

NFPA 70: National Electrical CodeŽ

chances are what you want is covered in the NEC and you can get it for free.​

There's also the ohio residential code:
Table of Contents

shooterschmidty 05-25-2016 09:55 PM

I've been studying the code (it sucks that a searchable pdf isn't available for free), which is straight forward for the most part, but not terribly prescriptive when it comes to what constitutes a modification to an existing circuit. From talking to an electrician and inspector, it sounds like inspectors have a fair amount of latitude when it comes to "old work". For example, it doesn't seem clear to me if the code permits extending existing ungrounded wires a very short distance to move a switch without rewiring the entire circuit to bring it up to current code. It is clear however,than any such splicing would need to be placed in a junction box.


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