About to start an apprenticeship, caught most of this but I can tell you have far more experience than I do. Got 4 years of school ahead and I hope I do it right.
I'm in shop class right now, we're learning basic electric work. It's going too slow for me. I just wanted to say thanks, this'll allow me to get a little ahead and I can go at my own pace.
Thank you for your video, simplicity is always key when grasping new information. I learned a lot: Homerun will be “home,” tie like colors, ground, black, then hot. All boxes feed off homemade. I especially enjoyed your explanation of the wires coming from the top of the box. Wonderful job. Have a great week. Peace to you as well.
I’ve been doing residential solar and electrical work for about five years now ,I’m looking to venture into strictly commercial electrical ,not going to lie this looks a lot more tedious and challenging.. I like it 👍🏽
@@niazhaque9504 I applied through everywhere I could and I got replies through Craigslist on the skill trades section of the job postings. I got about 5 calls back and took the first job offer I got with a small company that does all kinds of construction in the rich areas. Apply to everything and apply yourself. It's never a boring a day. Good luck!
be very careful going into home wiring all the codes take effect here, its not like commercial wiring where you have plans and an engineer telling you everything you have to do spec by spec on the plans, most of all the new codes come into effect in the residential fields
Nice job. I’m curious why you used MC cable instead of NM sheathed cable. Is MC more cost effective? Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Much appreciated.
every one of those home run boxes jumping to another power box are connected one and wired one by one ? and leads back to the power box ? or some of them you have found ways to connect them if they seperate wired to the power box, which is apart from the other ones in the garage?
each wire and box has a specific purpose. you have to know the purpose so you know how to wire it accordingly. some are "home runs" to one box and stop. some hit the first box then jump to others.
Well first off it's called MC not conduit. Second just because they legally could use romex doesn't mean the prints said they could. MC is way stronger and harder for a stray screw to damage it. Also critters are not going to be able to chew threw aluminum but they definitely will chew through plastic
And in Chicago here we have all hard conduit not bx or romex. MC or flexible conduit we can only use less then 6’ I think. To like an appliance or for remodeling and moving electric..
In major cities this is almost strictly forbidden. In certain municipalities they aren’t as stringent and code varies so they can run MC ,Flexible conduit or Romex cabled wire.
Thanks. I definitely couldn't have done this without this video. This was an incredibly concise and well thought out explanation of basic house circuits.
this was probably after 5 years experience when this was recorded, but it shouldnt take more than 4-6 months tops to be pretty decent. I started with no experience too
@@jacksonhurd7632 I have an appointment to apply to local 1 next week. Any tips or insight you could offer me? I would appreciate it so much. I'm really nervous and have no construction experience but I really want this and I NEED to get past the interview process.
@@DailyElectrician hey am try to take classes to become an engineer when I look at all the work stuff they do on paper looks kind of scary it’s true I haven’t learned anything yet but I wonder if I could get the hang of it should I really go for it
I need the video before this video. This was already too far ahead for me. Had no idea what was going on besides "this goes here, these go here." I need the why and how.
I have my fan running and my LED recessed lights on. When I turn off the fan, on it's own switch, my LED lights also turn off momentarily (and then come back on). Why??? I have a switch for my fan, and a switch next to it for my LED recessed lights in my bedroom. Any insight would be appreciated.
Was noting the quality of your line cabling, it's called 'BX' cable? Is that right? Here in Georgia they only use the plastic coated wires. But out in the country where we are, sometimes 'wildlife' gets in, and they like to chew on cable. So I wish we had the metal-clad stuff like you are installing in the video. Is it something I need to ask for when having new wiring done?
is this is a home or a commercial install I see all branch circuits are in the metal cable which is commercial grade wiring usually home wiring is done all in nm cable throughout the home why is this home in commercial-grade wiring, this is a heavy expensive thing to do
No, apply for an apprenticeship, meanwhile you get a chance to get into the apprenticeship. Work for an electrical company and get experience while going to school. Many I’ve seen go to school only, then they get a school certification/degree and don’t make it in the field. Now unions are usually fast to get you into an apprenticeship if you pass their exams with very good scores, non union schools help out a lot if you wanna get a job fast but as an Electrical Trainee. Search up the meanings of these two it will help out a lot.
You do that in belgium, you are fired in one second! Thoses cables pass through in the middle of the wall are forbidden here... Sorry for the bad english...
@@anoniemoss3566 i think i understand that you can wire a cable in a vertical or horizontal way on a device like a switch? Seems to bee appropriate :) here we can only wire a cable horizontaly under 10 inch or upper x inch or on a vertical way up or under a device... But we doesen't have steel protection like that in residential installation :)
@@dsmjaime Hey man, got nothing to add just wanted to give love and support for ya. Hope everything is going well and you achieve what you want to brother
I would residential the same as commercial even though residential has different NEC codes. Doing it the commercial way, you’ll get better quality. That’s my opinion honestly
Why is it a bad idea to take the output of a Honda EU2200i and bring it into a house via the 240-volt GENERATOR INLET? I realize that it cannot power the whole house. I am only looking to power one circuit. I also realize that the generator only outputs 120-volts. However, can't 120 easily be converted to 240? Simply encouraging me to just run extension cords through doors/windows doesn't answer my question. I want to understand why using the generator inlet (NEMA SS2-50P) is a bad idea (or impossible). If it is possible & won't hurt anything, I would much rather use the inlet vs. running an extension cord through a window.
I just discovered that a variety of products exist on the market that are aimed at doing what I described above. Should I gather from that that what I am wanting to do is perfectly safe & legitimate? I also have this question: Many of the adapters I have seen only have one 5-15P feeding them. Should I assume from that that what comes out the other end is only 110v? In other words, 110v exiting from a, let's say 14-50R, which is obviously designed to supply 220v? If so - if only 110 volts enter the house via the generator inlet, what issues (if any) would that cause?
Hi guy some one please tell me the different between home depot 2 gauge thhn copper wire and Lowes wire. They both made by southwire but why does lowe list it can only carry max 110 amp while home depot listed on their site 125 amp max. If I don't remember wrong, I think in store even said 130 amp. I plan to run 25-28 feet inside conduit over head inside garrage ceiling. 125 circuit breaker box. Thanks
Check NEC code book and look at the 75C column. The reason for 75C column is must use the lowest value for the entire system and circuit breakers are only rated to 75C.
I heard dishwasher and microwave... this isnt a house is it??? Flex wire(mc wire) is a no no for homes. I'm guessing this is a breakroom for some commercial building.
@@DailyElectrician don’t be sorry man you did a good job explaining everything. People won’t learn electrical shit off RUclips they gotta get out be in the environment and do it
@@DailyElectrician there we go fixed it lol but forreal i have never seen that before but good job. Looking to get back into the trade i have a couple years experience but this was 8 years ago or so.. just watching videoes for refreshers.. im hoping it will all come back to me like the journeyman said...🤞
I was wondering that too. And if you are going to use mc, why are they using regular 1/2 emt fittings at each box. That almost looks like 3/8 mc. They make a fitting to clamp on mc.
@@DailyElectrician I’m an electrician you explained it fine lol u just forgot to say line in but people who don’t know. Don’t know the terms “Line, load, GFCI, homeruns lol branch circuits, switch legs lmao looks like a cool job though it’s commercial or residential why are y’all using metal boxes
buy the way guy's or girls out there if you are going to do a job big or small do a good job ok because word of mouth gets around in our building trades industry and tells us what you are doing right or wrong ok, there is a big difference in having a silver tongue ok and looking good, but the real truth is can you deliver on your words, can you get the job is done when called upon or not, so all and all is know the why's and what for's of what you are doing in the field out there ok, anyone can hang up boxes, pull wiring thru raceways ok but remember why you are doing it to achieve what? ok yes type of cables correct outside must be w rated for wet area's everything outside a building is considered outside, so nm cable is not approved for wet areas ok, also know how to figure out your minimum branch circuit conductors from 220 volt fixed appliances like condensers, mini splits etc when I inspect your job I'm going off the fla on the unit which gives me a lot of information on the unit like minimum amps, maximum and or minimum breaker sizes, etc. if the unit does not give you the minimum breaker size than you always multiply the minimum amps by 115% this gives you, your smallest breaker size which will be the next size up from the 115% multiplier ok and of course, it will always give you the maximum breaker size, and you cannot go over it at all or you will fail the job if it says maximum 20 amp breaker that's it no 25-30 amp allowed ok
hi I need to replace signal Vanity light to double vanity light what is the code for that can i split the wire from the one that is already there and install a second junction box for the second one since i got to mirror need to install two light as will thx
For a beginner this is pretty confusing or maybe I’m just slow
Agree 💯😂
Not slow at all , it’s the way he’s doing in… it’s the voice
i’m confused too lol
I mean he did say this probably doesn't make any sense to you a couple times. He must have known he can do but not teach, lol
You aren't slow. It's just an awful video. If I didn't already know most of this, I certainly wouldn't after this video.
I have basic knowledge, but for a couple of seconds I thought I was watching baseball with all the homeruns. 😂😂🤣🤣
You made me choke on my watermelon
😂😂😂
About to start an apprenticeship, caught most of this but I can tell you have far more experience than I do. Got 4 years of school ahead and I hope I do it right.
How the classes going?
I want to get into an apprenticeship, too, but finding it a little hard to find a starting point
I'm in shop class right now, we're learning basic electric work. It's going too slow for me. I just wanted to say thanks, this'll allow me to get a little ahead and I can go at my own pace.
happy to help :)
glad you can work at your own paste
@@tootsmcgee5735 I use to eat paste In kindergarten .. guess I use to go at my own paste too
I once spilled paste all over the carpet…. My mother was severely disappointed
You said paste
why are these people saying this helped? I didn’t learn anything at all from this
You need to already have basic knowledge or have installed or worked on electrical before.
im 15 and know net to nothing and got a lot out of this video this guy just dont understand
Glad it helped Jams! 🙏🏼
Thank you for your video, simplicity is always key when grasping new information. I learned a lot: Homerun will be “home,” tie like colors, ground, black, then hot. All boxes feed off homemade. I especially enjoyed your explanation of the wires coming from the top of the box. Wonderful job. Have a great week. Peace to you as well.
I’ve been doing residential solar and electrical work for about five years now ,I’m looking to venture into strictly commercial electrical ,not going to lie this looks a lot more tedious and challenging.. I like it 👍🏽
Same here
do it! :)
Hey Leo, I know I’m just a stranger but can you tell me your experiences and pay? I just wanna know how others are faring in this trade.
@@Zepego-jk2iz started at 17hr in solar, first commercial electric job 20, 6 months later 23 at new company. At 2 years experience I’ll be at 24 or 25
I'm 2 weeks into my apprenticeship and we ran more home runs than this lol I'm looking forward to my 3rd week and onwards. Thanks for the videos.
congrats on your apprenticeship! thanks for watching! 🙏🏼
How old are you?
Where did u manage to find apprenticeship???
@@jltaco85 I'm 32 and I wish I had done this when I was younger.
@@niazhaque9504 I applied through everywhere I could and I got replies through Craigslist on the skill trades section of the job postings. I got about 5 calls back and took the first job offer I got with a small company that does all kinds of construction in the rich areas. Apply to everything and apply yourself. It's never a boring a day. Good luck!
Thanks man. Considering becoming an electrician and this helps.
happy to hear that :)
Same
How’s it going now are u a electrician
@@seth_speakzzz yeah I wanna know too, did you do it?
@@theundeadthrasher no I think ima just do mechatronics
And today I more or less learned what a home run is, something that connects directly to the breaker.
Black wire = Hot, White wire= Neutral, Green wire= Ground.
💯
wrong! Black "ungrounded" White "Grounded" and Green "Grounding" conductor
“ that probably doesn’t make any sense to you “ 😂
looking to be an electrician so this helped a lot
happy to hear it :)
be very careful going into home wiring all the codes take effect here, its not like commercial wiring where you have plans and an engineer telling you everything you have to do spec by spec on the plans, most of all the new codes come into effect in the residential fields
Thankyou for takeing your time out. God bless.
Thankyou for showing your work.
my pleasure 🥹
are there any videos similar to this explained in a more clear way?
Nice job.
I’m curious why you used MC cable instead of NM sheathed cable. Is MC more cost effective?
Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Much appreciated.
It’s a commercial project.
Got it. Thanks for the clarification.
Bruh what. All you’re saying is this is connected to this and this is connected to this. What was educational about this video
😂🫵🏼
"For these wires you hook them to these wires and don't make those wires explode." . . . thank you for the help.
anytime
every one of those home run boxes jumping to another power box are connected one and wired one by one ? and leads back to the power box ? or some of them you have found ways to connect them if they seperate wired to the power box, which is apart from the other ones in the garage?
each wire and box has a specific purpose. you have to know the purpose so you know how to wire it accordingly. some are "home runs" to one box and stop. some hit the first box then jump to others.
This is really helpful you did a great job explaining everything👍🏼
Thanks, Glad it could help!!
What is the height of your panel,What the code says. and switches
Jesus loves you
Can I take this at college without any experience
its an apprenticeship, different than college but no experience needed.
@@DailyElectrician ok good 😀
☺️
Bro … WHAT BUDDY
Home run was a cool terminology.
That sub panel is going to be an eyesore in the kitchen .
How do you sign up as an apprentice? Do you call an electricial company?
Apply at an electrical apprenticeship.
Do u need to go to tech school to be an electrician?
no
Why did you have to run conduit inside of walls instead of romex? Im in Ohio and thought conduit is not required inside of walls.
I guess he charged pretty good and added the bells and whistles
Well first off it's called MC not conduit. Second just because they legally could use romex doesn't mean the prints said they could. MC is way stronger and harder for a stray screw to damage it. Also critters are not going to be able to chew threw aluminum but they definitely will chew through plastic
And in Chicago here we have all hard conduit not bx or romex. MC or flexible conduit we can only use less then 6’ I think. To like an appliance or for remodeling and moving electric..
Just following the job specs :)
@@jonlehman2671 yeah but MC is technically a type of conduit so he’s got the idea.
This is like watching a video from the 60,s compared with what we do in northern europe. lol.
haha
In major cities this is almost strictly forbidden. In certain municipalities they aren’t as stringent and code varies so they can run MC ,Flexible conduit or Romex cabled wire.
Thanks. I definitely couldn't have done this without this video. This was an incredibly concise and well thought out explanation of basic house circuits.
👍🏼
You telling me you watched this video and then wired your house?
@@ericsimmons3784 there’s no fkn way lmao
😂🤷🏻♂️🔥🤘🏻
Hii , can i ask a quastion ??
yeah
@@DailyElectrician How much money do you get a year for being an electrician??
depends where you live. in portland oregon we get $112,008 if you work fulltime.
@@DailyElectrician If I want to be an electrician, how long should I take the course ??
it's not really a course, it's an apprenticeship (training school). they take 4-5 years
How long did It take you to get this good I’m about to start my first day of school and have no prior knowledge whatsoever 😭
this was probably after 5 years experience when this was recorded, but it shouldnt take more than 4-6 months tops to be pretty decent.
I started with no experience too
@@DailyElectrician thanks 🙏🏽
no problem!
Bro same I start with ibew local 1 on Monday and I’m clueless
@@jacksonhurd7632 I have an appointment to apply to local 1 next week. Any tips or insight you could offer me? I would appreciate it so much. I'm really nervous and have no construction experience but I really want this and I NEED to get past the interview process.
Clear as mud.
🙌🏼
Why metal boxes and MC on wood studs?
commercial kitchen
That doesn't mean it has to be in MC. Unless of course it's in the specs
i'm assuming it was in the specs because thats what we used and it wouldnt make sense otherwise but I never saw the specs.
@@DailyElectrician engineers suck
Do you get any help
yeah
@@DailyElectrician hey am try to take classes to become an engineer when I look at all the work stuff they do on paper looks kind of scary it’s true I haven’t learned anything yet but I wonder if I could get the hang of it should I really go for it
if you want to
I got some of it if not all thanks.
I like the music in the background!
🙏🏼
I need the video before this video. This was already too far ahead for me. Had no idea what was going on besides "this goes here, these go here." I need the why and how.
i got a playlist, check it out. called "electricial 101" hope this helps :)
I have my fan running and my LED recessed lights on. When I turn off the fan, on it's own switch, my LED lights also turn off momentarily (and then come back on). Why??? I have a switch for my fan, and a switch next to it for my LED recessed lights in my bedroom. Any insight would be appreciated.
Was noting the quality of your line cabling, it's called 'BX' cable? Is that right? Here in Georgia they only use the plastic coated wires. But out in the country where we are, sometimes 'wildlife' gets in, and they like to chew on cable. So I wish we had the metal-clad stuff like you are installing in the video. Is it something I need to ask for when having new wiring done?
You can ask the electrician to use Ac90 cable, it’ll just cost more money to do the job
Why call Ac90 to bx
this is a commercial kitchen so its in MC (bx) you can have it installed in houses just more money
Why MC cable?
spec
Thanks dude, appreciate the instruction!
my pleasure
is this is a home or a commercial install I see all branch circuits are in the metal cable which is commercial grade wiring usually home wiring is done all in nm cable throughout the home why is this home in commercial-grade wiring, this is a heavy expensive thing to do
residential electricians got er made
only if they like it 😂
How do you stretch the wires when you cut them too short? Lol kidding, nice crash course
haha, I know that was a joke but sometimes you can cut corners :P Thanks man, appreciate the support as always :)
Simple and adequate for the purpose
Thanks man
Of course :)
I wanna become an electrician so about to start watching a bunch of RUclips videos until I go to trade school
nice! thats a great start
No, apply for an apprenticeship, meanwhile you get a chance to get into the apprenticeship. Work for an electrical company and get experience while going to school. Many I’ve seen go to school only, then they get a school certification/degree and don’t make it in the field. Now unions are usually fast to get you into an apprenticeship if you pass their exams with very good scores, non union schools help out a lot if you wanna get a job fast but as an Electrical Trainee. Search up the meanings of these two it will help out a lot.
@@cipher1167 already done
You do that in belgium, you are fired in one second!
Thoses cables pass through in the middle of the wall are forbidden here...
Sorry for the bad english...
That is allowed and fairly standard in the states. As long as your hole in the stud is centered, your alright.
@@anoniemoss3566 i think i understand that you can wire a cable in a vertical or horizontal way on a device like a switch? Seems to bee appropriate :) here we can only wire a cable horizontaly under 10 inch or upper x inch or on a vertical way up or under a device...
But we doesen't have steel protection like that in residential installation :)
I would say the way they did that borders on overkill. Most installs I see still use NM-B cable and plastic boxes.
Appreciate that
of course :)
I want to go to school to become an electrician. Did you go to school?
F the school. Get out in the field and work.
I went through an apprentiship.
I ended up getting my CDL. I’m gonna try starting a transportation business first!
Hope things work out for you 🙂
@@dsmjaime Hey man, got nothing to add just wanted to give love and support for ya. Hope everything is going well and you achieve what you want to brother
First timer seeing yo vidz, I used to install appliances and light fixtures. This video help sonny boiii!’’’
Why cap the gots?
All the time pays whoever is not there and by the way wire nuts no allow inside a panel it's not a J-Box
wirenuts are allowed inside a panel
This must be for a commercial business
yeah, assisted living
I would residential the same as commercial even though residential has different NEC codes. Doing it the commercial way, you’ll get better quality. That’s my opinion honestly
Why is it a bad idea to take the output of a Honda EU2200i and bring it into a house via the 240-volt GENERATOR INLET? I realize that it cannot power the whole house. I am only looking to power one circuit. I also realize that the generator only outputs 120-volts. However, can't 120 easily be converted to 240? Simply encouraging me to just run extension cords through doors/windows doesn't answer my question. I want to understand why using the generator inlet (NEMA SS2-50P) is a bad idea (or impossible). If it is possible & won't hurt anything, I would much rather use the inlet vs. running an extension cord through a window.
I just discovered that a variety of products exist on the market that are aimed at doing what I described above. Should I gather from that that what I am wanting to do is perfectly safe & legitimate? I also have this question: Many of the adapters I have seen only have one 5-15P feeding them. Should I assume from that that what comes out the other end is only 110v? In other words, 110v exiting from a, let's say 14-50R, which is obviously designed to supply 220v? If so - if only 110 volts enter the house via the generator inlet, what issues (if any) would that cause?
There was almost nothing basic about this video.
Not competent enough to watch episode 2 😂
Hi guy some one please tell me the different between home depot 2 gauge thhn copper wire and Lowes wire. They both made by southwire but why does lowe list it can only carry max 110 amp while home depot listed on their site 125 amp max. If I don't remember wrong, I think in store even said 130 amp. I plan to run 25-28 feet inside conduit over head inside garrage ceiling. 125 circuit breaker box. Thanks
Check NEC code book and look at the 75C column. The reason for 75C column is must use the lowest value for the entire system and circuit breakers are only rated to 75C.
I heard dishwasher and microwave... this isnt a house is it??? Flex wire(mc wire) is a no no for homes. I'm guessing this is a breakroom for some commercial building.
Why do u think bx is a no no for resi? 😅 it’s more than excepted in residential applications just requires more material and cost
It says episode 1 but it sound as episode 2 or 3. What on earth are you doing for a basic learner? An electronics engineer asks you that?
Sorry to let you down. what you wanna know?
@@DailyElectrician don’t be sorry man you did a good job explaining everything. People won’t learn electrical shit off RUclips they gotta get out be in the environment and do it
Wait you guys ran MC cable on everything? Weird.
commercial specs
@@DailyElectrician oh, it just looked like residential ... my bad, I was assuming.
all good ☺️
I came looking to learn but holy s.... made things so confusing 😕
sorry, i'm gonna try to make another one in the future
Terrible....dont make anymore videos....explain in detail ......
hahahahahahahahahahahaha
I understood everything. A little different overthere.. mc an romex. Over here i call it bx and lumex.. same things though..
thanks ☺️
Good video
So many home runs lol. Your gonna use a lot of positions lol.
lol
I like having my wire nuts facing up so if water ever gets in it won't sit in and corrode it
🔥
I’m gonna explain this but if you don’t get it then nvm. Nice.
😂😂😂😂
They are receptacles not plugs
ok
I have never seen BX used in wood framing
this isnt residential tho
@@DailyElectrician there we go fixed it lol but forreal i have never seen that before but good job. Looking to get back into the trade i have a couple years experience but this was 8 years ago or so.. just watching videoes for refreshers.. im hoping it will all come back to me like the journeyman said...🤞
nice, keep me posted! I hope everything goes smoothly for you :)
Why Romex cables? Is this a new code?
Good video👍👍
This guy definitely knows what he is talking about but I think he just isn’t the best at explaining it
Thank you, that means a lot! I was still a young apprentice or journeyman at the time of this video. So I appreciate it!
What state let's you run Mc like this? Why Mc over romex?
Running that much Mc hurts my feelings. Roughing a house is tedious enough without having to wear out a hole saw like this
I was wondering that too. And if you are going to use mc, why are they using regular 1/2 emt fittings at each box. That almost looks like 3/8 mc. They make a fitting to clamp on mc.
Every state allows it
@@supgirlucute7363 what holesaw same bit as for romex
@@anoniemoss3566 I didn't see any emt fittings just snap-in mc connectors
Nice and neat
Thank you!
????????? You scaring me about all those wires. U mix me up like in the first 30 seconds. Lol 👎🏽
ill make another one in the future, sorry about that.
@@DailyElectrician I’m an electrician you explained it fine lol u just forgot to say line in but people who don’t know. Don’t know the terms “Line, load, GFCI, homeruns lol branch circuits, switch legs lmao looks like a cool job though it’s commercial or residential why are y’all using metal boxes
thanks! just the spec it called for i believe
You lost me on "Box" 😅
Why....why is everything MC?
job specs
Hr stands for home run
NIce vid
thank you!
Who let the student teach ?
myself
I didnt understand shi you said bro this wire goes there this wire goes there bruh
not everyone will 🤷🏻♂️
Good work man but did you run BX instead of Romex? Aren’t you converting the walls with drywall?
Its no bx its mc
Wtf am I watching? You got me lost. I’ll search elsewhere
ill have to make a simpler version 😂
remake video. Remember your first day. Would this help you? Or is this just u attempting to flex on the job you did...
yes it would help me
not flexing at all
Your not the best explainer but I agree the video 😁
Not gonna lie watching these video makes me cringe because I dont know if its live or the powers are shut down. Good info tho.
The panel had no power running to it, it's all dead.
thanks!
This is very confusing...not a 101
ok
bx in the panel is a big no no
ok
Stick to doing electrical.
i did
@@DailyElectrician cause this is awkward and confusing to those of us who speak English as a first language
👍🏼
Bruh😂😂😂😂
☺️
buy the way guy's or girls out there if you are going to do a job big or small do a good job ok because word of mouth gets around in our building trades industry and tells us what you are doing right or wrong ok, there is a big difference in having a silver tongue ok and looking good, but the real truth is can you deliver on your words, can you get the job is done when called upon or not, so all and all is know the why's and what for's of what you are doing in the field out there ok, anyone can hang up boxes, pull wiring thru raceways ok but remember why you are doing it to achieve what? ok yes type of cables correct outside must be w rated for wet area's everything outside a building is considered outside, so nm cable is not approved for wet areas ok, also know how to figure out your minimum branch circuit conductors from 220 volt fixed appliances like condensers, mini splits etc when I inspect your job I'm going off the fla on the unit which gives me a lot of information on the unit like minimum amps, maximum and or minimum breaker sizes, etc. if the unit does not give you the minimum breaker size than you always multiply the minimum amps by 115% this gives you, your smallest breaker size which will be the next size up from the 115% multiplier ok and of course, it will always give you the maximum breaker size, and you cannot go over it at all or you will fail the job if it says maximum 20 amp breaker that's it no 25-30 amp allowed ok
That was so confusing
Sorry
6:37 ‘,:)
hi I need to replace signal Vanity light to double vanity light what is the code for that can i split the wire from the one that is already there and install a second junction box for the second one since i got to mirror need to install two light as will thx
Take the hot from the feed and the hot from the light , tie them in at the switch from there tie ur neutrals in together
Script it next time please i cant stand you talk all slow like that.
Thanks for watching.
Good stuff dude tryna join apprenticeship soon
thanks! niceee!
Do you guys recommend apprenticeship?
if you wanna be an electrician, yes.
@@DailyElectrician but you can be one without taking apprenticeship right
depends on your state, most likely not these days. but possibly
This was miserable to listen to as someone trying to get into this