When you start to cover these...put 6 or so inches of dirt in, the lay yellow caution or red danger tape/robin in the trench. So if you later on, or someone else digs the tape I will be seen first
When you start to cover these...put 6 or so inches of dirt in, the lay yellow caution or red danger tape/robin in the trench. So if you later on, or someone else digs the tape I will be seen first
That's a good idea....I built my house and shop and even I cant exactly remember how everything ran after a few years
I ran electrical from the pole to my house, and water from the well to the house. Well and electrical pole were close to each other, so they ran in the same trench 90% of the way to the house. The electrical from pole to house was 200 amps, so we buried it about 5' deep in a 4" pvc. Filled back about 18" then ran water, then filled in trench
Definition of conduit
1 : a natural or artificial channel through which something (such as a fluid) is conveyed
a conduit for rainwater
2 : a pipe, tube, or tile for protecting electric wires or cables
3 : a means of transmitting or distributing
There is a difference between channel and pipe/tube.
Yes sir brother I totally agree, that is what the book says.
But you sound like a green horn saying it. That is all I'm saying.
For sure... I was kidding.
My BIL wanted to sound like he knew what he was talking about when he went to the electrical supply house and asked for “four aug” wire for his RV service. What he needed was No. 4 AWG (he pronounced the AWG) and what he got was 0000. We had a heck of a time wresting that stuff into a 30A receptacle box!!
Definition of conduit
1 : a natural or artificial channel through which something (such as a fluid) is conveyed
a conduit for rainwater
2 : a pipe, tube, or tile for protecting electric wires or cables
3 : a means of transmitting or distributing
There is a difference between channel and pipe/tube.
Ask a plumber to come put in conduit for you and he’ll tell you to call an electrician.
Even though it’s just a gravel driveway it’s pretty cheap to sleeve them with a larger size pvc pipe. This will protect the pipe/conduit as well as simplify replacement. Definitely sleeve it if it was concrete.
My BIL wanted to sound like he knew what he was talking about when he went to the electrical supply house and asked for “four aug” wire for his RV service. What he needed was No. 4 AWG (he pronounced the AWG) and what he got was 0000. We had a heck of a time wresting that stuff into a 30A receptacle box!!
That is funny 😁. Big price difference.
The 0000 designation is actually pronounced like aught...yup like thirty aught six.
You would be asking for 4 aught wire. AWG stands for american wire gauge😉.
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