Bob meets up with Greg Roulette the electrician who is working on the rough wiring of the house. Greg ran all the circuits back to one central location, the circuitbreaker panel. Greg demonstrates how to rough wire the breaker panel, which has ground, neutral and hot wires that are being "made up" in the panel box. They also discuss how wires are sized throughout the house. For example, the kitchen requires 20-ampere circuits, which are 12-gauge wire. The higher the number on the gauge of wire, the thinner the wire is. The discussion moves onto the question of can the homeowner do this themselves? Yes they can! The homeowner must obtain a permit and abide by all codes just as the electrician must do!
old apartment buidling and the circuitbreaker for my apartment keeps tripping a power strip (with a 15 amp circuitbreaker) with the appliances plugged appliances before the downstairs circuitbreaker trips off, but it doesn't
a 20 amp GFI outlet, and the circuitbreaker to my garage is also 20 amps compressor, it would trip my circuitbreaker. It runs for a minute or two two, it would trip just the circuitbreaker. Is there anything I can
project. I am now wanting to add some overhead lights to an existing overhead lighting circuit. To determine the circuitbreaker that controls this circuit, I turned on the lights, then flipped each 110 breaker on my panel, but the lights never