I had another thread specifically about two 220v circuits in conduit.. I think that ran its course, so now I'll start this thread for my complete plan.
For those of you electrician types that want to play along and sanity check my amateur efforts, here's what I've come up with for my shop (garage) wiring.
(I've had to link to externally hosted images as WoodNet isn't letting me attach anything for some reason)
Basically the plan is to create a 3/4" EMT raceway up near the ceiling with 6 drop-points.
Each gray box numbered 1-6 is a 4x4x2 box. The thicker black lines labeled A-F are the 3/4" EMT and the thinner unlabeled black lines are 1/2" EMT for the drops.
Anything "below" the boxes on the diagram is on the wall, anything above is on the ceiling.
Each non-gray color represents an individual circuit.
The purple/blue are a pair of "general purpose" 110/20 circuits. This pair of circuits will go the entire run and drops are to a 2-gang box with both a black and white receptacle indicating which is which.
One light circuit can be tapped off any box, but I'll tap it in 3 spots for layout reasons (it's a busy ceiling with large I-Beams in the way). I've only included one light circuit as the shop (garage) itself already has a light circuit fed from the house.
One 220/20 circuit (green) powers both the table saw and jointer.
The 110/20 dust collector gets its own (yellow) as does the 110/20 air-cleaner (red) and the 220/30 heater (orange)
All 20amp circuits fed with 12g THHN , the 30amp heater fed with 10g THHN , and the dedicated ground wire inside the whole EMT run will be 10g green THHN. (though I will do some more research into using the EMT itself for grounding as was suggested in the old thread.)
I labeled each conduit section (A-F) and each box (1-6) so that I could try to put together a matrix of how many of each size wire is passing through or splicing at each point so I could do fill calculations and check for needed ampacity adjustments using these online tools:
Conduit Fill Calculator (https://www.southwire.com/calculator-conduit)
Box Fill Calculator (https://www.constructionmonkey.com/calcu...al/boxfill)
Ampacity Calculator (https://www.cerrowire.com/products/resou...alculator/)
I think I counted everything right and came up with this matrix which shows how many of each sized grounded and non-grounded conductors are inside each section of conduit or inside (spliced/passing through) each box. This is what I came up with, and it looks like I can use a 4 11/16" sq. X 2 1/8" box (42 square inches) as that's well above the minimum box volume for each spot and none of the fill percentages exceeded 40%. I also didn't find any need to adjust wire sizes for ampacity (again, sanity check me please!)
Diagram of drop-points (1-6) and conduit sections (A-F):
edit: where the 220v tablesaw/jointer are, I'll put them before the general purpose pair of 110's so that their conductors don't need to pass through. The drawing makes it look like they'd be after in the wire feed.
edit2: Brainstorming a simpler idea that may be much more flexible.. Rather than "calling out" specifically the air cleaner & dust collector since I know I want them to be able to run at the same time as other things, if I instead just make 3 "generic" individual 110v circuits and two "generic" 220v circuits, then just run them all to each location, so that no matter where I am, I have close access to any of them in any combination.. If one thing's for sure it's that my layout is going to evolve over time.. What would that look like, a 4-gang box holding 3 110v receptacles and 1 240v receptacle?
thanks for any comments!
For those of you electrician types that want to play along and sanity check my amateur efforts, here's what I've come up with for my shop (garage) wiring.
(I've had to link to externally hosted images as WoodNet isn't letting me attach anything for some reason)
Basically the plan is to create a 3/4" EMT raceway up near the ceiling with 6 drop-points.
Each gray box numbered 1-6 is a 4x4x2 box. The thicker black lines labeled A-F are the 3/4" EMT and the thinner unlabeled black lines are 1/2" EMT for the drops.
Anything "below" the boxes on the diagram is on the wall, anything above is on the ceiling.
Each non-gray color represents an individual circuit.
The purple/blue are a pair of "general purpose" 110/20 circuits. This pair of circuits will go the entire run and drops are to a 2-gang box with both a black and white receptacle indicating which is which.
One light circuit can be tapped off any box, but I'll tap it in 3 spots for layout reasons (it's a busy ceiling with large I-Beams in the way). I've only included one light circuit as the shop (garage) itself already has a light circuit fed from the house.
One 220/20 circuit (green) powers both the table saw and jointer.
The 110/20 dust collector gets its own (yellow) as does the 110/20 air-cleaner (red) and the 220/30 heater (orange)
All 20amp circuits fed with 12g THHN , the 30amp heater fed with 10g THHN , and the dedicated ground wire inside the whole EMT run will be 10g green THHN. (though I will do some more research into using the EMT itself for grounding as was suggested in the old thread.)
I labeled each conduit section (A-F) and each box (1-6) so that I could try to put together a matrix of how many of each size wire is passing through or splicing at each point so I could do fill calculations and check for needed ampacity adjustments using these online tools:
Conduit Fill Calculator (https://www.southwire.com/calculator-conduit)
Box Fill Calculator (https://www.constructionmonkey.com/calcu...al/boxfill)
Ampacity Calculator (https://www.cerrowire.com/products/resou...alculator/)
I think I counted everything right and came up with this matrix which shows how many of each sized grounded and non-grounded conductors are inside each section of conduit or inside (spliced/passing through) each box. This is what I came up with, and it looks like I can use a 4 11/16" sq. X 2 1/8" box (42 square inches) as that's well above the minimum box volume for each spot and none of the fill percentages exceeded 40%. I also didn't find any need to adjust wire sizes for ampacity (again, sanity check me please!)
Diagram of drop-points (1-6) and conduit sections (A-F):
edit: where the 220v tablesaw/jointer are, I'll put them before the general purpose pair of 110's so that their conductors don't need to pass through. The drawing makes it look like they'd be after in the wire feed.
edit2: Brainstorming a simpler idea that may be much more flexible.. Rather than "calling out" specifically the air cleaner & dust collector since I know I want them to be able to run at the same time as other things, if I instead just make 3 "generic" individual 110v circuits and two "generic" 220v circuits, then just run them all to each location, so that no matter where I am, I have close access to any of them in any combination.. If one thing's for sure it's that my layout is going to evolve over time.. What would that look like, a 4-gang box holding 3 110v receptacles and 1 240v receptacle?
thanks for any comments!