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Romex

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Romex® Must Be Protected
Romex® wiring is simply plastic-coated wiring (typically 10-, 12-, or 14-gauge) wrapped in another plastic sheathing.

 


Romex Cable Contains a Ground Conductor
The ground conductor is required for all applications as well.
The ground conductors are always bonded together to insure the integrity of the ground path.

Romex: A name brand of nonmetallic sheathed electrical cable that is used for indoor wiring.
Roof jack: Sleeves that fit around the black plumbing waste vent pipes at, and are nailed to, the roof sheeting.

Romex: A non-metallic sheathed cable consisting of two or more insulated conductors having an outer sheath of moisture resistant, non-metallic material.

ROMEX: Nonmetallic sheathed electric cable.
ROUGH-IN: Putting up the skeleton of the building or home.
RUN: Horizontal distance of a flight of stairs, or the horizontal distance from the outside wall to the ridge of a roof.

Romex has adjacent supply and return wiring allowing for significant reduction of Magnetic fields.

Run a 14/3 romex from the first detector to the next detector and so on to each of the other detectors. This circuit needs to be daisy chained, do not splice the cable and take a single cable to a detector.

NM
A type of Romex cable (nonmetallic sheathed cable that contains several conductors). The cable, which is flame-retardant, is limited to use in dry locations only and can not be exposed to excessive moisture.

You can use 10-2 Romex from the pressure switch to the control box.
From the control box, you will need to use special pump wire. It will need to be buried in the ground clear to the well casing.

I ran the electrical power with conduit and underground romex, and I used a GFCI plug so that I could turn off the electrical power at the unit anytime I needed to.

Residential Electrical Term Romex is a particular type of
electrical wiring used mainly in new home construction. Romex
consists of a certain size wires wrapped in a plastic sheath. A ...

You cannot use the 12-2 w/ground wire (Romex I am assuming) anywhere where exposed to weather, sunlight etc.. I am sure that your shed is NOT attached to your house, therefore the 12-2 wire would be exposed.

Now in the attic you have both romex cables coming up, one goes to the power source, (breaker box) the other goes to the track light. The black wire is to be used as the live wire at the box. The white wire is the neutral.

12 shows this type of cable, which often is marketed under the name Romex. This type of cable can be used only indoors and in permanently dry locations. Romex-type wiring is normally used in residential construction.

Cable Nonmetallic - A type of Romex cable (nonmetallic sheathed cable that contains several conductors). The cable, which is flame-retardant, is limited to use in dry locations only and can not be exposed to excessive moisture.

Drill 1" holes about knee high in the wall studs to run non-metallic, sheathed cable (Romex) to the boxes. Nail cable brackets (called "staples") every 4 1/2' to secure the cable.

5. Follow up. Anchor the exposed wire to the joists with Romex staples. Fill the holes in the plate with a fire-stop sealant and spackle over the holes in the wall.

There are many different types and uses of wire and cable in the home. Common cable and wire include NMD90, Loomex, Romex and more. Cable and wire are measured by a standard. Continue read...
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There are wire strippers specifically designed for removing the tough outer sheathing from nonmetallic electrical cable (Romex), but I've never seen an electrician use one. Most use a utility knife to strip away the outer sheathing.

To install a new box, run a 12/2 Romex cable down the wall. The cable will need to run behind the drywall next to a stud. It connects the disposal unit to the switch and receptacle (Figs. 1 and 2).

Wires for 120Vac lights can branch off the stairlift wiring, either at the stairlifts or directly from the inverter. Any 12Vdc lights can use romex wire (usually a no-no for dc electricity) since LEDs draw virtually no current.

This is by far the safest way to route electrical wiring and insure a proper grounding. Other forms of housing for electrical wiring are BX (a flexible, aluminum coil) and romex (a rubberized insulator).

All of the alarms operate off the same circuit from the fuse box and are normally connected using normal wire for three-way switches (see How Three-Way Switches Work for details -- this wiring contains black, white and red wires in a Romex casing).

See also: Electrical, Home, Wiring, Light, House