The advantage of having the electrical hidden in the ceiling instead of in the floor is that you can use the ceiling light electrical boxes as junction to other stuff. I don't see how they are going to easily thread a wire in those ducts even if using a draw wire, but they didn't show that part. x)
I finally made time to watch one of your long-form videos. I enjoyed it. I noticed that on this job you did not draw the plan on the floors/walls and you didn't cut the channels with a saw. Did you take this video before you started doing that? And I'm curious about setting the toilet. It does not look like you use any anchor bolts into the floor to secure the toilet. In the USA we do use two anchor bolts. What prevents your toilet from moving/tipping? The water line?
Doing it in organised way is not waste and it is not for aesthetic purpose only doing pipe like this help in future when u do ur wiring u would not struggle to make them pass easily and organised pattern help more and make work easy I like that kind of love and passion for ur work
GOOD work bro love the quality and time you put in. quality over quantity. yes they all come with there advantages and dis-advantages but do what works best for you.
Its about time you madexsure there is consistency in their work. Sone videos show the conduit being pushed into the conduit couplings without being glued in and some lije this one show then being glued - need to train all your apprentices to be more coherent 😂😂😂😂
c63 on general in one house ? c 32 on one circuit in one house ! you to up man , the electrical devices have to protect not to be strong ! congratulation for the pipes !
What if the house floods? That would be my main worry with wires going underneath the tiles. Flood can also occur due to water-overflow or some plumbing breakage. Sure it is now well insulated, but thats so many wires over so many decades. Plus there is lights, fans and all application of wires on the ceiling and walls, while there is nothing on the ground. Thus, you will have to anyway put wires through ceiling.
I will comment your fuse box, as non electrician, but you can disagree, 1. First off that looks like a secondary fuse box, that's for industrial use, you shouldn't use C curve for home, also I hope this is 110V, bcs these fuses are overkill for 220V, will never pop. 2. It lacks the overcurrent protection. 3. GFCI should be separate from lighting and sockets, if your fuse pops in the middle of the night bcs of a faulty appliance you should at least find your way to the fuse box. 4. Busbars are better than wires. 5. I'd use a fusible there as well.
In Deutschland ist die Elektroinstallation viel einfacher. Mit den ganzen Rohren dauert es viel zu lange und ist zu umständlich. In Deutschland wird in der Regel ein NYM oder NYY genommen. Das kann ohne Probleme in der Wand oder auf dem beton gelegt werden , ganz ohne Rohre 😊
@@CIFYou Yes, in addition to more then a single conductor for each mechanical connection being an issue. Id also question the choice to use jumpers between breakers. The wire feeding them would be undersized for feeding multiple 25amp breakers, causing a risk of fire. In addition, having parallel wires feeding the breakers from the left and right side of the row, is an issue. The shorter conductor on the left, would have less then half the resistance of the wire feeding the right side, (even if the resistance is tiny, at those short lengths) ensuring that the shorter wire, always carried the bulk of the amperage, and may lead it it failing, and again, fire.
@@giuseppeblanco1256 It's not so much that. It's more, when you see the size of wire feeding the main 63amp breaker. The conductors on the bottom side of the main breaker, feeding the six 25 amp breakers, should be the same size. Whether its top side of the breaker, or bottom side, the amps will remain the same. - Now, instead you have 2 small conductors feeding the six 25 amp breakers. One at either end. However the conductors are different lengths. Even if its a very small amount, copper wire has resistance. If one conductor is 3x longer then the other. It will have 3x the resistance. Meaning the short one will always have more amps, then the longer one. This would not normally be an issue in most cases, but the main conductors are undersized. - You would need to have 6 individual wires, one to each 25amp breaker. Or main conductors and jumpers that are capable of carrying the full 63 amps of the main breaker
А если я захочу проложить трубы системы радиаторного отопления,или трубы водяного теплого пола.Было бы хорошо под потолком прокладывать электрогофру...😮
At 7:54, it is at the bottom row: blue, red, red, blue, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red. It triggers me hard that it isn't always blue, red, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red ..., blue, red
I see C25 and C32 rated interrupts. This is general house wiring with trip current 5-10 time the rated current. B rated is toasters and other resistive loads or some higher house loads. tripping current lower, like 3-5 time s rated. D rated is for high inductive current with trip currents 10-20 times rated. Not a fan of multiple wires in a breaker...but codes differ.
As an election, doing underground work is more difficult. I'll charge you more if you want me to pull it through the ground cause that means I need fill with cement or grind through the ground to get your pipes there
Voice narration is inaccurate. Why tell the electrician what wire to use? We study this shit, it's standards to know which size of cable for the kitchen or bedroom
In switzerland we lay the electrical pipes in the concrete ceiling. It's much faster and you can pull the wires very easy afterwards.
The advantage of having the electrical hidden in the ceiling instead of in the floor is that you can use the ceiling light electrical boxes as junction to other stuff. I don't see how they are going to easily thread a wire in those ducts even if using a draw wire, but they didn't show that part. x)
It's very easy if the bends are smooth like in the video.
@@MrOpenGLyeah. There’s a big difference between 90 degree bends and bends with a radius of meters.
I need workers like you😢
I finally made time to watch one of your long-form videos. I enjoyed it.
I noticed that on this job you did not draw the plan on the floors/walls and you didn't cut the channels with a saw. Did you take this video before you started doing that?
And I'm curious about setting the toilet. It does not look like you use any anchor bolts into the floor to secure the toilet. In the USA we do use two anchor bolts. What prevents your toilet from moving/tipping? The water line?
Doing it in organised way is not waste and it is not for aesthetic purpose only doing pipe like this help in future when u do ur wiring u would not struggle to make them pass easily and organised pattern help more and make work easy I like that kind of love and passion for ur work
OCD takes many forms... some of them quite nice.
Beautiful and expansive
GOOD work bro love the quality and time you put in. quality over quantity. yes they all come with there advantages and dis-advantages but do what works best for you.
Its about time you madexsure there is consistency in their work.
Sone videos show the conduit being pushed into the conduit couplings without being glued in and some lije this one show then being glued - need to train all your apprentices to be more coherent 😂😂😂😂
Great work! Could you tell us what type of conduits you are using??
Very expressive 😮
What is advantage of having such beautiful patterns in wiring as everything will be hidden afterwards??
True, but well ran pipes mean smooth wire pooling.
easy troubleshoot..easy to remember..easy to trace..easy to fix
And easier for the supervisor/inspector.
I agree with you
nice video my from Bangladesh ❤I am a electrician your job very nice hello bro your country
c63 on general in one house ? c 32 on one circuit in one house ! you to up man , the electrical devices have to protect not to be strong ! congratulation for the pipes !
What if the house floods?
That would be my main worry with wires going underneath the tiles. Flood can also occur due to water-overflow or some plumbing breakage.
Sure it is now well insulated, but thats so many wires over so many decades. Plus there is lights, fans and all application of wires on the ceiling and walls, while there is nothing on the ground. Thus, you will have to anyway put wires through ceiling.
I will comment your fuse box, as non electrician, but you can disagree,
1. First off that looks like a secondary fuse box, that's for industrial use, you shouldn't use C curve for home, also I hope this is 110V, bcs these fuses are overkill for 220V, will never pop.
2. It lacks the overcurrent protection.
3. GFCI should be separate from lighting and sockets, if your fuse pops in the middle of the night bcs of a faulty appliance you should at least find your way to the fuse box.
4. Busbars are better than wires.
5. I'd use a fusible there as well.
In Deutschland ist die Elektroinstallation viel einfacher. Mit den ganzen Rohren dauert es viel zu lange und ist zu umständlich. In Deutschland wird in der Regel ein NYM oder NYY genommen. Das kann ohne Probleme in der Wand oder auf dem beton gelegt werden , ganz ohne Rohre 😊
That engineer's pipe is inevitable to leak if you use glue like that.
Only outside of the USA. Doesn't meet approval here. U can't double tap any wiring like this video and plus pipes need connectors
You're right
@@CIFYou Yes, in addition to more then a single conductor for each mechanical connection being an issue. Id also question the choice to use jumpers between breakers. The wire feeding them would be undersized for feeding multiple 25amp breakers, causing a risk of fire. In addition, having parallel wires feeding the breakers from the left and right side of the row, is an issue. The shorter conductor on the left, would have less then half the resistance of the wire feeding the right side, (even if the resistance is tiny, at those short lengths) ensuring that the shorter wire, always carried the bulk of the amperage, and may lead it it failing, and again, fire.
@@trevorcorwynn1311seems like it works for them so there’s that.
@@trevorcorwynn1311 the rows have main conductors at both ends, so only the connections in the middle are the farthest.
@@giuseppeblanco1256 It's not so much that. It's more, when you see the size of wire feeding the main 63amp breaker. The conductors on the bottom side of the main breaker, feeding the six 25 amp breakers, should be the same size. Whether its top side of the breaker, or bottom side, the amps will remain the same. - Now, instead you have 2 small conductors feeding the six 25 amp breakers. One at either end. However the conductors are different lengths. Even if its a very small amount, copper wire has resistance. If one conductor is 3x longer then the other. It will have 3x the resistance. Meaning the short one will always have more amps, then the longer one. This would not normally be an issue in most cases, but the main conductors are undersized. - You would need to have 6 individual wires, one to each 25amp breaker. Or main conductors and jumpers that are capable of carrying the full 63 amps of the main breaker
А если я захочу проложить трубы системы радиаторного отопления,или трубы водяного теплого пола.Было бы хорошо под потолком прокладывать электрогофру...😮
At 7:54, it is at the bottom row: blue, red, red, blue, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red. It triggers me hard that it isn't always blue, red, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red, blue, red ..., blue, red
Would be nice if I had the time or energy to do something like this. But that would require a remodel.
Can you send the link web site for find this type of pvc electrical pipe?
pvc-u you can look for it, it is usually white. Red and blue are separate production codes
You use water pipe?
تاسو ښه کار کوی بايد افغانستان ته راشی مونږ برق ته زيات ضرورت لرو
I see C25 and C32 rated interrupts. This is general house wiring with trip current 5-10 time the rated current. B rated is toasters and other resistive loads or some higher house loads. tripping current lower, like 3-5 time s rated. D rated is for high inductive current with trip currents 10-20 times rated. Not a fan of multiple wires in a breaker...but codes differ.
I confirm you are a real electrician, or an electrical engineer. Your electrical knowledge is very good.
@@CIFYou He states simple Circuit breaker characteristics (B, C, D) you say they are a "real electrician" or an electrical engineer?
Good wark❤❤❤❤ pls ppr fitings warkin❤❤❤❤❤
0:06 Doing that is wrong.
Why would it be wrong?
@@phantomito91 Because the cable does not support the load of all the circuits.
why u using non monolithic cables and same size wires for connecting diffrent areas and all the areas to main breaker 7:53
As an election, doing underground work is more difficult. I'll charge you more if you want me to pull it through the ground cause that means I need fill with cement or grind through the ground to get your pipes there
If conduits are to be installed in concrete, then they are cast in concrete.
Imagine flooded into your house. Does it feel safe?
It's going to be covered up by a thick layer of concrete anyway it doesn't matter.
In italy we do more easy. We use corrugato. You are mads
Why so many conduits? Is this a commercial installation?
one tube for one circuit, one tube will go to each room in the house
I want to buy the flexceble wire insert to onduet
Try finding them on amazon.
This is beautiful but a bit wasteful for something that won't be seen.
Thanks, but you've been seen =))
Why can't he have a ferrules in a MCB box?
reduce costs
@@CIFYou They are not that expensive either. This is good from security point of view If you have to do cost cutting then do it in other things.
I’m tired of this voice being used by everyone. Dude be different please.
FFS ya have to be a pipe fitter and a sparky to do that shit I'd want double wage 200 quid day rate 😂😂😂
a lot of waste. continue as is
in our country all house electrical working in this pipe fittings price 😅
او متاصيفانه افغانستان تر اوسه برق نلري 😢😢😢😢😢
Tjis is too mach you are going to 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Voice narration is inaccurate. Why tell the electrician what wire to use? We study this shit, it's standards to know which size of cable for the kitchen or bedroom
This technique is very very useless
You don't work so you got no say in it
Stupid idea
What is this pipe called?
electrical conduit
In switzerland we lay the electrical pipes in the concrete ceiling. It's much faster and you can pull the wires very easy afterwards.