Things we love about the Jackery 5000+: - Power up to 12 circuits in your home. Duration of use without additional batteries depends on your household energy consumption. - Be integrated with existing solar panels (but not inverters). - Be charged while simultaneously powering devices or circuits. - Support both manual transfer switch integration for home backup and Electric Vehicle (EV) charging (NOTE - The Jackery 5000+ cannot support an oxygen generator.) The brand new Jackery Solar Generator 5000 Plus delivers 5kWh capacity (expandable to 60kWh) and 7200W AC output, offering a quiet alternative to fuel generators: bit.ly/4eIIutn
Over 40 years of doing electrical work here. When you need to run a pull string or rope, tie a plastic bag onto the string, place it in the beginning end and then use a shop vac to suck it to the other end. Big wires, change the string to a rope. 2 people is best for the bigger wires. One pulling and one pushing. The ground rod, I watched an electrician only use a cup of water to push an 8’ ground rod in the ground. No tools at all. Just gloves. Looks like you’re doing just fine. Thanks for your videos.
Nice job guys! When pushing big wires through conduit, i would suggest using some "pull lube" on the wires. It makes it so much easier. YOU GUYS ROCK!❤
I had to sink a new ground rod at my place (Central Illinois) and I attached a garden hose to a length of copper pipe and used the water pressure to drill it out. My old man told me to try it and I thought for sure he was nuts. Turns out it was the perfect solution for my application.
I was thinking the same thing, but I'm not sure about the cup of water and how that would work. I use an old blue tin coffee cup upside down with some cork inside myself. It's the perfect height when you get to the bottom and the cup hits the ground.
I built my house including all the wiring. When I got my inspection he told me that I could do wiring in his territory any time. He also asked why I had multiple empty boxes in every room with conduit down to the basement. They were for telephone, rf, cat five and independent generator lines for backup. best Idea I ever had.
Hats off for your "can do" attitude for everything you guys do, tackling all aspects is commendable. Your inspector is probably following your series and has video proof of how you installed everything as a failsafe.
I am sure you will receive numerous suggestions on how you should have done this and that. Suffice to say hats off to both of you for taking on another major project. Thanks for sharing.
We did our own wiring, but had an electrician do all the hook ups. Saved us a ton. Inspector took about 4 hours on our inspection. Don’t forget a ground on your gas line. He found it. We needed a permit to tie in from the city, and needed an electrician to pull the permit for that. You will never complain that you put too many plug ins after you move in.
Before you go too far, don't forget to install a conduit for a potential solar panel set up on the roof to feed the jackery and also would it be a good move to tie that metal roof to the house earth rod with a heavy duty copper to deal with a lighting strike ?
only commercial buildings tie the roof to a ground/neutral... every time someone uses an elevator or the AC unit kicks on, get a solid 80 volt off a 300 volt system back feeding into the roof. that's why the birds fly off all together, some don't and freeze in place.
@@ardennielsen3761 Why only commercial buildings ? I'm in the UK, so really struggle with your building / electrical regulations, but I would have thought it prudent to have a big chunk of metal like that roof, grounded
@@ardennielsen3761 Wow, you have some serious electrical faults over there if that happens! However I know that dry climates have major issues finding an earth. A friend's property in central Morrocco has multiple extra long copper rods and pipes buried in the ground and they have to pour salt water around them regularly in dry weather. In southern Germany ALL metal roofs are grounded with multiple very heavy duty copper straps. In the UK it is normal to ground almost everything metal. Domestic water pipes used to be used for ground, because the inlet pipes were metal. However as plastic pipes became increasingly common and many older properties had earth faults, too many water workers were being electrocuted, so it's now banned. In fact the power companies no longer trust households to have a decent earth, so the mains earth is provided by them as the Neutral for all new connections.
tip on the ceiling lights. Use a dot laser and mark where they go on the floor with paint. Install drywall over the light area. Then go back after and use the spot laser again to install the lights later. Easier then cutting them in as you put up the drywall.
im no sparky but got a few tickets in the civil industry and one thing your taught about underground services is that they should have tape above the conduit to tell an operator in a digger that they are about to hit said service. just one thing i saw that id highly recomend if adding any other underground services as it is to easy to break them when digging
i had a training school wire my house . these were young men in training to be electricians with a licensed electrician as the foreman and the school teacher that came every day to inspect the work . the boys were a little slower as they were learning but the end result was perfect .,oh and it was way cheaper .
For ppl who decide to do this ... glue all the conduit then tie a plastic bag to the pull string and use a shop vac on the opposite end much simpler also pulling lube helps with pulling the wires ... margarine also works in a pinch
Butter? No. You'll attract rodents. I would have done it the way he did and not the vacuum trick on this project. No need and the way he did it worked fine. If you have a problem and it's all glued, you're screwed. Not sure why he used conduit. Most places I don't think that's required.
Dish soap works too. There are also some special lubes that won’t harm the wire insulation. Every foot or so wrap electrical tape around all the wires so it stays together as a bundle and it makes it easier to pull.
A couple of tips for wiring and Non-Metallic (PVC) conduit: A) With non-metallic conduit, there is NO pressure (like water pipe). You don't need a primer. It's ok to use, but not required. B) They do make a gray cement for NM conduit. It dries a bit "softer" - See tip C. C) ONLY put your cement on the MALE end of the connection. Why? You don't want to push the glue up into the FEMALE coupler if you glue the female coupler. It can dry and form sharp spikes (like the "edges" you spoke of regarding bell ends). Time and time again, I've seen those sharp spikes of glue (especially when it's the wrong glue) rip the wire sheathing when doing long pulls. It can leave you with lots of feet of wire that will NOT pass inspection. D) For your floor penetrations, you can use fireproof foam but it is sometimes hard to get it all the way around and through the hole for code. Tape the bottom of the hole off good and use "INTUMESCENT" caulk. It flows in and fills the hole better (fire and cold air) and is much easier to use. It also works on all types of water pipe and any type of conduit. 3M and DAP both make a good product.
I love it when inspectors are available and helpful. It's like having a pocket expert. Inspectors can be the best teachers when the right type of person gets the job. Edit: Sounds like all of the findings were easy fixes. Good job!
If you haven't already started drywalling, may I suggest using blocking in the walls. Everything from cabinets to towel hooks, towel rods, TV mount, etc. And in the shower, if you're going to do glass doors w/ hinges, grab bars and anything else you can think of. It really makes life easier when you start the exciting project of finish work. Looking great so far! You two are really saving loads of money by doing this entire project yourselves!!
and take pictures of every wall before you drywall / insulate. knowing where that blocking is and where that wire / pipe in in the cavity is an awesome resource to have.
Seconded here. We did our own framing and electrical. Very happy with the results (a pro framer was amazed at the quality of our framing, but 2400sf took 11 months). Blocking was really important. I probably put too much, but no regrets. Also: SUPER HELPFUL: Once you're done, cut an 8' long strip of plywood about 1 or 2" wide and mark off measurement every inch in a contrasting sharpie (red for 12" increments, green for every inch in between). Then spend 2 days taking pictures of someone holding this "stick of truth" up next to every. single. stud. Follow up by taking pics of a tape measure measuring left-to-right on every framed wall. Yes, it'll take forever. Yes, it's a pain. But now that we're in the house I can confidently say that this was probably the #1 most helpful thing that we did. Now we can drill a hole anywhere with absolute confidence. And you can point to any point on any wall and I can tell you exactly what is behind it and how many inches of clearance you have. It's been incredibly helpful. Good work!
as an electrician, i highly appreciate not having to drill through blocking when putting things in after the walls are closed, much less risk of accidentally drilling out of the wall instead of through the blocking.
My father passed back in May, and I will miss him dearly. One of the many, many things he taught me was the easy way to run a pull string. After all your pipe is connected, tie a small piece of cloth to the pull string, and stuff it in one end of the pipe. Hold your shop vac up to the other end of the pipe, turn it on, and it sucks the cloth (and the pull string with it) through the pipe very quickly. Great trick to know if you end up breaking a pull string or having to run a wire in an existing pipe.
Use Shop Vac to pull the pull string threw, Tie wad of paper to end of string to make suction better on string! It works I used this trick many times, Use Hammer drill to drive in grounding rod...
I live near these guys and have worked with both electrical inspectors, the building dept inspector, the plumbing inspector, the hvac inspector, and the septic inspector, and they are all pretty cool guys. :)
@@Valgrind850 Also tend to have a lower work load, so your not waiting weeks for an inspection to turn up. That said they seemed pretty lax compared to what I have seen and experienced before. I think the worst inspectors are in major cities. In a rural area you mess up you burn down your house, in a major city you mess up and you burn down the neighborhood. Plus I always felt the inspectors are influenced heavily by the major contractors to keep Independents out of the business. Not only are they more harsh on your projects, but they seem to let a lot of garbage slide as long as it' done by a major company.
Great job on your electrical installation. We used to have a farm where we did most of the wiring ourselves. I never wanted to do the main feed from the pole to the service panel, so I always hired an electrician to do that. The backup system for critical loads is a fantastic idea. Thank you for sharing this with us.
@@jjackflash8907 Right it is easier to put the conduit bends over the wire than trying to run the wire thru the conduit after it is attached to each other and the ends. Do the conduit in steps from one end to the other.
Easy 3 way thought 😊the black sccrew on one goes to the fixture,, the black screw on the other goes to your power source, then the travelers just go on the other screws in an order.😊😊
Never hurts to have a large number of wall outlets. Otherwise a wall outlet is not close enough when yu go to find one. When I watch your projects reminds me of my late father who built our house and did all the work except for the laugh and plaster in the days before drywall, and the plumbing. One of my uncles was a plumber and my dad helped him install the plumbing, So when you do projects like this, it brings back memories of my late bother building our home.
As an apprentice Marine Electrician many years ago building submarines I worked pulling cables through long conduits. Try 48 rubber coated cables, each a bit thicker than yours, through a tight conduit over 60 foot long. They had to be snug to avoid movement when energized. We used a 5-gallon bucket of Murphy's Lemon Soap.
@@CrapE_DM DC installations are very different than housing with AC voltage. I worked on a moveable cement mixer plant with DC motors and had to study a whole new book to work on that job. And don't use any soap for housing work other than "wire lube" from a supplier. I have seen it all and some are not good for insulation. Murphy's might be fine for true rubber jackets like used for DC but might not be good for plastics. Better safe than sorry. A few bucks for the right thing that is approved for the purpose is not much to a full job price.
milwaukee makes a cable stapler thats awesome cable staples are not supposed to be pounded hard into the cable, they are supposed to have just enough room to adjust the cable
I once wired a 30x40 shop on property we owned in SW Idaho 20 yers ago, and with a little advice and assistance from an electrician friend, I was able to do it for about $2,000 and it passed inspection! The best bid I got from an electrician was $7,000. Good job Riley and Courtney!!
About 20 years ago I was quoted close to $1000 just to replace a chandelier. Only reason I called someone is I didn't have a tall enough ladder to do it. Buying a ladder was way cheaper 😂
For pulling wire, use a leaf blower to blow a string through the pipe. Use this string to run a rope heavy enough to pull the wire. Tie the rope to the wire. Pull on the rope to pull the wire. Wipe some grease on the wire so it slides through the pipe.
The sell wire lube for getting these cables through the conduit. Also, while you're doing all this, think about where you might need conduits later. They are super easy to install (and cap) now.
Considering you’re not a professional contractor electrician or HVAC person, you did an outstanding job. I really enjoyed watching your process and wish you all well. Cheers from Canada. 🇨🇦💝🇺🇸🙏🥰👍
FYI, if you made the cables for your critical loads longer, you could have wired them directly into the critical load center without the splices in the main breaker box.
Yes, while not required by code, it is good general practice to not have splices in a load center. Waste a little more wire but well worth it later. No connector is perfect so every one is a failure point risk.
@@markpashia7067 So basically instead of splicing it into the main breaker box you should run a new feed from the sub panel direct to the outlet / lights wanted in acase of an outage.
Great job Riley. I'm lucky enough to know a Master Electrician that allows me to "phone a friend" which saves me a lot of headaches with the inspector. Only thing I would ad is that your forget to pay yourself for doing the work, when you calculate the total savings, your time is definitely worth money for sure :-D. You also saved a TON of money by not having to use the Ground fault and Arc Fault breakers on your house. Almost all my circuits here require them, and also a whole house surge protector. I would recommend one of those for your houses, saves a LOT of equipment incase of lighting strikes.
Especially with that metal roof which should have it's own ground system installed. Even if they are isolated from roof and wiring system, lightning jumps all kinds of crazy paths. I have seen it follow a wet wood handrail for thirty feet and go through wood siding before finding a copper wire and wrecking a house. We spent days tick tracing the wiring to find all the broken wires in that A frame house patching each break as needed. Usually pulling new wire into covered walls and ceilings. All because they put a metal sail boat mast as a flag pole from the ground and hooked to the deck railing above for support. Yet they never thought to ground the bottom of that aluminum mast. Wow!!! Needless to say, they paid us to put a ground rod and wire to that mast as part of the job. It would not have run that hand rail if it had an easier path to ground.
Yes, saved a $50 per breaker by not installing AFCI breakers, because who doesn't enjoy a good arc fault fire? Saving $20K on labor, but not installing AFCI is a rookie error.
@@donmajkol2856 - They are. 2023 NEC requires GFCI in: (1) Bathrooms. (2) Garages and accessory buildings. (3) Outdoors. (4) Crawl spaces (at or below grade). (5) Basements. (6) Kitchens (now including range receptacle, refrigerator receptacle, disposal receptacle, and microwave receptacle). (7) Food or beverage preparation or cooking areas. (8) Sinks (receptacles within 6 ft of the top inside edge of the bowl of a dwelling unit sink). (9) Boathouses. (10) Bathtubs or shower stalls (receptacles within 6 ft of the outside edge of a bathtub or shower stall not installed within a bathroom). (11) Laundry areas. (12) Damp and Wet Locations Indoors. And the 2023 NEC requires AFCI breakers as well: All 120-volt, single-phase, 15- and 20-ampere branch circuits supplying outlets or devices installed in dwelling unit kitchens, family rooms, dining rooms, living rooms, parlors, libraries, dens, bedrooms, sunrooms, recreation rooms, closets, hallways, laundry areas, or similar rooms or areas.
When wiring a multistage wire to a solid wire always extend the multistage wire 1/16th inch past the solid wire to allow the wire nut to grab the multistage first, works every time.
@@Wrenchmonkey1except for when your doing anything over 12 gauge. Also, try sticking a handful of 5 port wagos in a box, then try it with red wire nuts. You’ll change your attitude. There’s nothing wrong with wagos, but they’re not the end all be all of wire connections
@@wm79198 Sure, there are some situations where you might HAVE to grudgingly use wire nuts, but what I said was once you use them, you'll never WANT to go back. If you find yourself in a situation where you have no other choice, then so be it.
I ran over 300 ft of metal clad in my new 26x40 metal building. It was a LOT of work. Especially, the lights and wire 15 ft up. It turned out great, but I now have a new found respect for electrician’s work!
Riley, You should check on using the "Wagos". Some states are not accepting them. The amount of current can be more than the "thin" metal connectors can carry without failing. NC has applied some strong restrictions on the use. Our son is part of a restoration business in NC.
so many folks think wiring is easy-well there are many rules to be followed and code is only a minimum-I hate following up wiring that a home owner as done -so much non compliance and cheap Charlie work!!!
@@dalekronk496 and after licenced elektrician need inspector come check all and measure all wires and ground and make papers can use this house wiring.
I believe you can wire your own home in every state. You might have to get an electrician in to inspect and approve it all before the building inspector and connecting to the grid. Otherwise home improvement stores would not sell any wire , fixtures, conduit, etc. to non-electricians.
Riley, you can tell your friend Andy that excavators ARE shovels. Really, REALLY big shovels... About pulling wires through conduit, it's best to use a shop vac to suck the string through. As for the big drop out of the meter, it's best to run the wire through the conduit before you glue it in place. It's much easier to fit the pieces with the wire already in them than it is to pull the cables afterwards. If you want help with plumbing and the rest of it, I'd be more than happy to join you and help out. Having been a general contractor I know a fair bit about building a house.
drywall not newer need more than putty at seam and seam paper and sanding and then have all ready to paint, not need mud anywere, totally pre-history old worst system.
Good save , I do my own wiring install and have foe many projects, I am a retired engineer and at 72 who knows how much I saved over the many moves renovations and builds through the years , I do admire your pioneering can do attitude. Well done!
I can tell you as an electrician superintendent you do better than most of our electricians in our company and our helpers. And the fact that you're an amateur at this blows my mind. Keep up the great work.
A good electrical inspector is a pleasure to work with. My inspector had some great practical suggestions of things I had missed on my wiring, and even complimented my work which I hadn't expected. He said he can usually tell in the first 30 seconds if the inspection is going to be a problem based on the homeowners attention to detail. Homeowners typically screw up on things they didn't know about, where problematic ones are issues of corner cutting or laziness. Thanks for posting the video!
Wagos are awesome. I had to change out a kitchen outlet to GFI, and there were 6 wires inside the existing box! The original connections were with wire nuts, and were very sketchy. Changed them all to Wagos, and they were much more secure and easy to get pushed into the box because you can position the wires before connecting them.
You should also wire in an outlet below the toilet, because even if you don’t, eventually, somebody will want to put a bidet or a Toto toilet, which would require electricity. I would also run all of my network wiring for things like stereos TVs and computers. Anything that you can think of in the future now that the walls are open, you wanna run anything you can think of.
From Australia, amazed that you are allowed to use bare copper in your wiring, I started my electrical apprenticeship in 1983 and bare copper earths were not allowed under our national wiring rules even then. Mind you we use 240/415V for our domestic housing not 110/240. Plus if a copper earths stake went in that easy we would have had to add a copper sulphate solution to the soil improve the connection to ensure the connection to earth was good enough.
240/415V? I’m not an electrician by any means… does that mean you basically run 3 phase to residential buildings? I wish the states would standardize 240v for everything. Less amperage equals a cheaper electric bill. I wish I could get 3 phase in my shop without a phase converter. The fabrication equipment is dirt cheap here!
Back in BI times (Before Internet) I finished a downstairs basement. Did all the plumbing, and electrical myself, including putting in a sub-panel and wiring 240 for baseboard electric heat. I learned a little from my Dad about basic electrical circuitry, but had to READ up on pretty much every element from putting in a sub-panel in the garage to running wire through the ceiling and down through one wall to get to the basement (with 3 circuits). Learned from the code book how to run wire on studs, where/how to cut studs and put in metal plates to protect them, how to run 3 way switches for overhead lights in a few rooms, etc. It was quite the learning experience. What made me proud at the end was having the inspector ask who did the work and when I said with a bit of trepidation- me. He proceeded to tell me it was some of the cleanest wiring he had seen and everything was run to code. Needless to say I was proud of myself and as you can tell, still am to this day (literally over 30 years later). I have since done many an electrical job myself and consider it a very good learned skill to have. While there are certainly reasons and situations to engage a professional (for example it can be a bit challenging wiring some circuits and doing some breaker box activities), I think it's a very logical and methodical process once you understand the basics of how electricity flows. With today's resources on the internet and video's readily available from experts, I can see it being so much easier to learn.
11:10 - I think you will need longer earth rods. In Denmark where I live, with RCD’s at 30mA, the resistance to earth can’t exceed 1666 ohm over the course of a year. Dry sand give some problems.. 😅😅
@@jackryan8719 are you dumb? It was a comparison of standard he clearly prefaced what he was saying by stating where he was.. unfortunately for Americans like you that make the rest of us look bad to the rest of the world, we are attached to the same planet, and ground works the same all around earth 🤦🏾♂️
If you put some kind of lubricant in the pipe , it makes pulling or pushing wire a whole lot easier . Also , wrap a little bit of tape over the ends of the wire so it doesn't get caught on the pipes joints . If you're using a covered wire for the " NEUTRAL " from the Meter to your Main shut off , make sure to mark with a colored tape which one it is . Happy Trails from 🇨🇦 to the 🇺🇸 . ✌ out . L8R
Please stop putting the holes so close to the top or bottoms of the joists. The closer to the 2x4 the more force is in the OSB. Also the closer you are to hitting it with nails, screws, or drills when you make holes. Typically you want to run services inside the middle 1/3 of the joist.
You use a hammer to set the height of your receptical boxes. Place hammer next to stud and set box on top of hammer. Pinch box to stud with one hand and use hammer to fix it to stud.
@@mattivirtaWhat! Wire nuts when properly installed have a near Zero failure rate. The best usage for lever nuts is connecting power to lighting fixtures. I’m a retired industrial electrical.
@@monteglover4133 im have industial and home elektric engineerin ad automation engineer too and working ower 40 year home and industrial elektric and automation engineer many factory, corporation and country.
You can use a plastic shopping bag tied to the pull string and use shop vac on the other end to suck the pull string though. It can be done up to hundreds of yards.
it comes down to who you know. if your are calling a electrician/plumber/hvac off of google your getting bent over. i recommend any person who is building/remodeling to instead of google ing? for a contractor google new subdivision near you. go there during the week and get the information off of the contractors working their, they are for the most time sub-subcontractors and will give you the best pricing. ive seen electricians here in texas charge homeowners 20k+ for remodeling work when i haven't paid over
I think it is a reflection that there is a building boom in Northern Idaho, and hence rates favor the trades. OTOH, Idaho is one of the more homeowner DIY states in that you can do your electrical, HVAC, and plumbing. I will have an interesting time next year.
That's fricken awesome, that yall were able to accomplish that on your own. And that you were able to save that much money. Plus you managed to do it quickly. Bravo and a job well done !
@thomasjeffersoncry that was always discusion on internet which one is better, you have a lot of tests here on youtube like amp rating etc for that. I do electricity for my job, and for last 10 years i use only wagos, when you scure it good, you can hang from it with no problem, and there are less mistakes with them, while wire nuts at least in europe rearly people use, and every time i found it on old instalstion, it was loose, due to years of wires heating and cooling.
@@MarkoAndjelic I am an Electrician with over 40 years experience, wire nuts have come a long way, with better ones all the time, todays wire nuts are excellent. they never loosen if installed good and tight with the wires twisted properly. I have watched the Wago videos and they cannot handle the loads of a wire nut. Lazy installers is where the problem would be with wire nuts, not the nut itself.
@@thomasjeffersoncry Wire nuts may be good for install but if you have to find a fault nothing beats lever wagos!😉 And twisting copper more than a couple of times work hardens the copper...🙄
Great job Riley! I was lucky to have spent a year working with an electrical contractor in my early 20's and saved me a ton of money being able to do my own electrical for nearly 50 years. How about running a conduit from basement electrical area to roof area for future solar?
Love your channel and you guys are the cutest couple. One easy trick to pulling pull string through existing conduit is to attach a nut or something to the string and use a shop vac at other end. I’ve pulled string over a hundred feet with several 45 and 90 degree bends and has never failed me. Just a quick tip I thought many people knew about.
I’m not an electrician, but I would have fed the wires outside the house through the pipes before assembling and gluing together. Also on the inside between the shutoff box and the breaker box, I would have used a metal pipe, to avoid accidentally penetrating the plastic one with a fastener sometime now or in the future during a remodel.
@@htdgwtr1 Yes it is. So many fail to recognize that his way has issues. The concept of a conduit is a permanent pathway for replacing wires. And that reaming the inside of any cut and proper gluing so that none enters the pipe is critical to the future. Only apply glue to the male part and push together such that no glue is pushed inside the conduit. Hard to control that with wire in the way.
Tip on the knock outs on your I joists. Use the claw of the hammer to knock them out. Focuses the force to start, then switch to the face of the hammer once it’s started.
When you’re nailing into a cramped area you could always use a pair of pliers instead of a pry bar. Because what you do initially is grip the nail shank halfway up and then hit the pliers as close as you can to the nail and then move it up and repeat, then at the head hold the pliers on the head of the nail and hit the pliers until seated (I learned that when I was younger (it also works in reverse too). When running heavy gage wire use a lube like cable lubricant or straight washing up liquid (washing detergent). I also hope you remembered to to use coloured electrical tape eg red, blue, yellow and green? That way you connect red to red, blue to blue etc etc.
add conduit for cat6 / fiber / low voltage wiring before you close up the walls. The one thing I wish every new construction did was include a path for future upgrades.
Nah, “Everything that can be invented has been invented," Charles H. Duell, Commissioner of the U.S. Patent Office , 1899. Good call, too many people never think past today. Conduit is cheap comparatively!
Having an EV charging or even parked under the house may add to or cost even void some house insurance policies. I dont know what your insurances are like over there but in Australia they are getting very expensive and difficult to deal with, some wont insure flats, unit, houses or rentals with an EV because of potential fire risk.
In my state , # 12 wire is required in the bathrooms along with ground GFI breaker or in the first receptacle. Kitchens the same with separate circuits for appliances. Bedrooms require arc fault breaker for each circuit. Garage requires #12 gauge wire on each circuit with a GFI at the beginning of each run or GFI breaker. Check with your building inspector or state building codes before it's to late.
Couple of hints I learned along the way....BUT great work!!!! 1) use pull lube when pulling through conduit. Helps immensely! 2) For unspooling NM, an 8" building tube fits perfectly inside the inner diameter of the coil of wire. This makes unspooling so much easier. (your ladder and rod would have worked)
The number of portable battery banks you guys have over the years, lol. Who needs electrical, each outlet is it's own battery with individual solar 😅 House is coming along great! One of the more fun projects to watch for sure
Things we love about the Jackery 5000+:
- Power up to 12 circuits in your home. Duration of use without additional batteries depends on your household energy consumption.
- Be integrated with existing solar panels (but not inverters).
- Be charged while simultaneously powering devices or circuits.
- Support both manual transfer switch integration for home backup and Electric Vehicle (EV) charging
(NOTE - The Jackery 5000+ cannot support an oxygen generator.)
The brand new Jackery Solar Generator 5000 Plus delivers 5kWh capacity (expandable to 60kWh) and 7200W AC output, offering a quiet alternative to fuel generators: bit.ly/4eIIutn
GRID SHAVING
I would love to know how to build a house but my brain can’t hold that much information like Riley’s
Can a fuel generator be plugged in to the Jackery to top it back up in the event of a many days long power outage?
I love the idea but if you only run your small loads to the smart panel it doesn't seem like it would help much.@@macclark4112
Why the callout about the oxygen generator? How much power does that need that it cant run it?
Over 40 years of doing electrical work here. When you need to run a pull string or rope, tie a plastic bag onto the string, place it in the beginning end and then use a shop vac to suck it to the other end. Big wires, change the string to a rope. 2 people is best for the bigger wires. One pulling and one pushing. The ground rod, I watched an electrician only use a cup of water to push an 8’ ground rod in the ground. No tools at all. Just gloves. Looks like you’re doing just fine. Thanks for your videos.
Yea, and he also missed an opportunity for another Jackery plug by having it run that shop vac.
Nice job guys!
When pushing big wires through conduit, i would suggest using some "pull lube" on the wires. It makes it so much easier.
YOU GUYS ROCK!❤
I had to sink a new ground rod at my place (Central Illinois) and I attached a garden hose to a length of copper pipe and used the water pressure to drill it out. My old man told me to try it and I thought for sure he was nuts. Turns out it was the perfect solution for my application.
I was thinking the same thing, but I'm not sure about the cup of water and how that would work. I use an old blue tin coffee cup upside down with some cork inside myself. It's the perfect height when you get to the bottom and the cup hits the ground.
@@thisolesignguy2733how does the cork inside yourself help with the process? Lol
I built my house including all the wiring. When I got my inspection he told me that I could do wiring in his territory any time. He also asked why I had multiple empty boxes in every room with conduit down to the basement. They were for telephone, rf, cat five and independent generator lines for backup. best Idea I ever had.
Sick brag bro
Nobody gives a 💩
@kevinm234 i did the same thing in my house in 2007 always a step ahead, I try.
If there is anything that will be future proof in a house it's conduit...
and then everyone clapped
The most expensive cable is the cable thats too short.
And I have the impression that they are all a little short
Grandpa used to say “I cut it twice and it’s still too short!”😂
measure thrice, pay once, cut once (maybe never... a little slack in the right place is always welcome)
Or just put an extra outlet somewhere and run your wiring more.@@asakayosapro
Hats off for your "can do" attitude for everything you guys do, tackling all aspects is commendable. Your inspector is probably following your series and has video proof of how you installed everything as a failsafe.
@@cod-the-creator be specific if you see actual problems - what are they doing which is dangerous?
I am sure you will receive numerous suggestions on how you should have done this and that. Suffice to say hats off to both of you for taking on another major project. Thanks for sharing.
We did our own wiring, but had an electrician do all the hook ups. Saved us a ton. Inspector took about 4 hours on our inspection. Don’t forget a ground on your gas line. He found it. We needed a permit to tie in from the city, and needed an electrician to pull the permit for that. You will never complain that you put too many plug ins after you move in.
You might consider also running low voltage internet (CAT6A) to all places you want hardwired network devices... TVs, Computers, acess points, etc...
This 👆
I'll 2nd this, also running flexcore and pull strings in case things change and tech upgrades (e.g. phone - cat - fiber)
not in the same trench as the electrical!
Yeah, especially from the providers router to computers that game or upload a lot.
what internet is high voltage? :D
Before you go too far, don't forget to install a conduit for a potential solar panel set up on the roof to feed the jackery and also would it be a good move to tie that metal roof to the house earth rod with a heavy duty copper to deal with a lighting strike ?
only commercial buildings tie the roof to a ground/neutral... every time someone uses an elevator or the AC unit kicks on, get a solid 80 volt off a 300 volt system back feeding into the roof. that's why the birds fly off all together, some don't and freeze in place.
@@ardennielsen3761 Why only commercial buildings ?
I'm in the UK, so really struggle with your building / electrical regulations, but I would have thought it prudent to have a big chunk of metal like that roof, grounded
@@ardennielsen3761 Wow, you have some serious electrical faults over there if that happens! However I know that dry climates have major issues finding an earth. A friend's property in central Morrocco has multiple extra long copper rods and pipes buried in the ground and they have to pour salt water around them regularly in dry weather. In southern Germany ALL metal roofs are grounded with multiple very heavy duty copper straps. In the UK it is normal to ground almost everything metal. Domestic water pipes used to be used for ground, because the inlet pipes were metal. However as plastic pipes became increasingly common and many older properties had earth faults, too many water workers were being electrocuted, so it's now banned. In fact the power companies no longer trust households to have a decent earth, so the mains earth is provided by them as the Neutral for all new connections.
@@ardennielsen3761 Then your earth is not good enough...
@Lee_Proffit Then your house becomes a giant lightning rod.
tip on the ceiling lights. Use a dot laser and mark where they go on the floor with paint. Install drywall over the light area. Then go back after and use the spot laser again to install the lights later. Easier then cutting them in as you put up the drywall.
@paulbriggs7126 you can do same thing with string and plum bob paint spot on floor
but you need wood to secure them, how are you going to do that with the drywall up
@@Carrs-Firm-Foundations with a ladder and your hand holding the string to the drywall
You should run an outlet behind each toilet in case you ever want to install Toto heated toilet seats. Easy to do now, a PITA after walls are up.
Or a full bidet. After I started using Japanese toilets I'll never go back.
im no sparky but got a few tickets in the civil industry and one thing your taught about underground services
is that they should have tape above the conduit to tell an operator in a digger that they are about to hit said service.
just one thing i saw that id highly recomend if adding any other underground services as it is to easy to break them when digging
i had a training school wire my house .
these were young men in training to be electricians with a licensed electrician as the foreman and the school teacher that came every day to inspect the work .
the boys were a little slower as they were learning but the end result was perfect .,oh and it was way cheaper .
For ppl who decide to do this ... glue all the conduit then tie a plastic bag to the pull string and use a shop vac on the opposite end much simpler also pulling lube helps with pulling the wires ... margarine also works in a pinch
Butter? No. You'll attract rodents. I would have done it the way he did and not the vacuum trick on this project. No need and the way he did it worked fine. If you have a problem and it's all glued, you're screwed.
Not sure why he used conduit. Most places I don't think that's required.
Dish soap instead of butter 😮
don't use margarine . it's an oil . the pulling lube is an alcohol base and will completely evaporate . and it's super slippery.
Dish soap works too. There are also some special lubes that won’t harm the wire insulation. Every foot or so wrap electrical tape around all the wires so it stays together as a bundle and it makes it easier to pull.
@@robertthomas5906 I beleive that conduit is required between the meter and main panel...which would include the disconnect, since it's in the path.
A couple of tips for wiring and Non-Metallic (PVC) conduit:
A) With non-metallic conduit, there is NO pressure (like water pipe). You don't need a primer. It's ok to use, but not required.
B) They do make a gray cement for NM conduit. It dries a bit "softer" - See tip C.
C) ONLY put your cement on the MALE end of the connection. Why? You don't want to push the glue up into the FEMALE coupler if you glue the female coupler. It can dry and form sharp spikes (like the "edges" you spoke of regarding bell ends). Time and time again, I've seen those sharp spikes of glue (especially when it's the wrong glue) rip the wire sheathing when doing long pulls. It can leave you with lots of feet of wire that will NOT pass inspection.
D) For your floor penetrations, you can use fireproof foam but it is sometimes hard to get it all the way around and through the hole for code. Tape the bottom of the hole off good and use "INTUMESCENT" caulk. It flows in and fills the hole better (fire and cold air) and is much easier to use. It also works on all types of water pipe and any type of conduit. 3M and DAP both make a good product.
Thats great advice I could've used when I pulled a bunch of #6 360 ft... Ill do that nxt time
The intumescent caulk is specifically designed to ruin pants. I'm sure it does something with fire too, but mostly, it just ruins pants.
@ yes, agreed. Lmao, yes.
if you ever read the directions on the glue cans...it specifically says to coat both ends btw
If you're burying it you absolutely have to glue it to make it waterproof. Friction joints are not acceptable.
A good idea is putting 2x6 blocking in the bathroom for grab bars, even if you don't install the bars it is nice to have 😊
I love it when inspectors are available and helpful. It's like having a pocket expert. Inspectors can be the best teachers when the right type of person gets the job.
Edit: Sounds like all of the findings were easy fixes. Good job!
If you haven't already started drywalling, may I suggest using blocking in the walls. Everything from cabinets to towel hooks, towel rods, TV mount, etc. And in the shower, if you're going to do glass doors w/ hinges, grab bars and anything else you can think of. It really makes life easier when you start the exciting project of finish work.
Looking great so far! You two are really saving loads of money by doing this entire project yourselves!!
INDEED. So vary nice to have blocking.
and take pictures of every wall before you drywall / insulate. knowing where that blocking is and where that wire / pipe in in the cavity is an awesome resource to have.
Seconded here. We did our own framing and electrical. Very happy with the results (a pro framer was amazed at the quality of our framing, but 2400sf took 11 months). Blocking was really important. I probably put too much, but no regrets.
Also: SUPER HELPFUL: Once you're done, cut an 8' long strip of plywood about 1 or 2" wide and mark off measurement every inch in a contrasting sharpie (red for 12" increments, green for every inch in between). Then spend 2 days taking pictures of someone holding this "stick of truth" up next to every. single. stud. Follow up by taking pics of a tape measure measuring left-to-right on every framed wall. Yes, it'll take forever. Yes, it's a pain. But now that we're in the house I can confidently say that this was probably the #1 most helpful thing that we did. Now we can drill a hole anywhere with absolute confidence. And you can point to any point on any wall and I can tell you exactly what is behind it and how many inches of clearance you have. It's been incredibly helpful.
Good work!
as an electrician, i highly appreciate not having to drill through blocking when putting things in after the walls are closed, much less risk of accidentally drilling out of the wall instead of through the blocking.
My father passed back in May, and I will miss him dearly. One of the many, many things he taught me was the easy way to run a pull string. After all your pipe is connected, tie a small piece of cloth to the pull string, and stuff it in one end of the pipe. Hold your shop vac up to the other end of the pipe, turn it on, and it sucks the cloth (and the pull string with it) through the pipe very quickly. Great trick to know if you end up breaking a pull string or having to run a wire in an existing pipe.
that is called a jet line,why he was pushing cable not good easy to hurt yourself electrical stuff has a lot of sharp edges
Use Shop Vac to pull the pull string threw, Tie wad of paper to end of string to make suction better on string! It works I used this trick many times, Use Hammer drill to drive in grounding rod...
A piece of cloth or plastic grocery bag work great. Just watch holding the string because it will burn cut you seriously
Lube helps😊
@@owenshiverdecker6999 yeah, but what do you use to help pull the wire, hee, hee, hee, lol!
Kudos to your inspector for being so easy to work with.
LOL yes it's always good to have an inspector that will let you get away with a poor job...LOL
I live near these guys and have worked with both electrical inspectors, the building dept inspector, the plumbing inspector, the hvac inspector, and the septic inspector, and they are all pretty cool guys. :)
@@urbanbeeman5402 Being easy to work with isn't the same thing as passing off improper work. 🤡
Sure helps to live in a small town, pretty awesome he accepted pictures
@@Valgrind850 Also tend to have a lower work load, so your not waiting weeks for an inspection to turn up. That said they seemed pretty lax compared to what I have seen and experienced before. I think the worst inspectors are in major cities.
In a rural area you mess up you burn down your house, in a major city you mess up and you burn down the neighborhood. Plus I always felt the inspectors are influenced heavily by the major contractors to keep Independents out of the business. Not only are they more harsh on your projects, but they seem to let a lot of garbage slide as long as it' done by a major company.
For stripping the sheathing off of romex, I use a carpet blade in my knife. Has a sharp hook, and acts like a seam ripper.
House is looking great!
The Romex stripper is well worth the money. No nicked sheathing
Great job on your electrical installation. We used to have a farm where we did most of the wiring ourselves. I never wanted to do the main feed from the pole to the service panel, so I always hired an electrician to do that. The backup system for critical loads is a fantastic idea. Thank you for sharing this with us.
Really enjoying this series. Could watch this for hours.
FYI For others
1. When putting wire in pipe "Lube is your friend
2. When pulling "Roll it all the way ou"t rather than trying to pull it off the roll
Sometimes it is easier to run the wire in the conduit before gluing it together
@@jjackflash8907 That's exactly what I was thinking, and what I do, far easier
Put a good pull rope in there and lube and have someone pull while you push, that goes nicely that way..
@@jjackflash8907 Right it is easier to put the conduit bends over the wire than trying to run the wire thru the conduit after it is attached to each other and the ends. Do the conduit in steps from one end to the other.
Lube is your friend: that's what she said!
Easy 3 way thought 😊the black sccrew on one goes to the fixture,, the black screw on the other goes to your power source, then the travelers just go on the other screws in an order.😊😊
Never hurts to have a large number of wall outlets. Otherwise a wall outlet is not close enough when yu go to find one.
When I watch your projects reminds me of my late father who built our house and did all the work except for the laugh and plaster in the days before drywall, and the plumbing. One of my uncles was a plumber and my dad helped him install the plumbing,
So when you do projects like this, it brings back memories of my late bother building our home.
As an apprentice Marine Electrician many years ago building submarines I worked pulling cables through long conduits. Try 48 rubber coated cables, each a bit thicker than yours, through a tight conduit over 60 foot long. They had to be snug to avoid movement when energized. We used a 5-gallon bucket of Murphy's Lemon Soap.
Isn't that tight against code? Does this case have an exception? Or am I just that ignorant about code?
@@CrapE_DM You know submarine code?
They make cable lube. It's not expensive and makes all the difference in the world.
@@CrapE_DM DC installations are very different than housing with AC voltage. I worked on a moveable cement mixer plant with DC motors and had to study a whole new book to work on that job. And don't use any soap for housing work other than "wire lube" from a supplier. I have seen it all and some are not good for insulation. Murphy's might be fine for true rubber jackets like used for DC but might not be good for plastics. Better safe than sorry. A few bucks for the right thing that is approved for the purpose is not much to a full job price.
@@onetwothreefour56879 Amen
Use the home depot plugs and switches with Wago’s built in. Cuts time to install in half. Allows easy adjustments and fixes. Worth the extra cost.
Good call. I picked one up to replace a broken switch in my house and was impressed. I’ll be using them next time I need to replace or add outlets.
I've been using those outlets on my remodel. 100% worth the cost. I think they're Leviton Decora Edge or something like that.
@@pellabandgeekespecially for dyiers
milwaukee makes a cable stapler thats awesome
cable staples are not supposed to be pounded hard into the cable, they are supposed to have just enough room to adjust the cable
Bought it recently. Makes life easy. Nice tool. And it’s a 12v tool to boot.
The Milwaukee cable stapler is a life saver especially if your in tight spots or on a ladder
I once wired a 30x40 shop on property we owned in SW Idaho 20 yers ago, and with a little advice and assistance from an electrician friend, I was able to do it for about $2,000 and it passed inspection! The best bid I got from an electrician was $7,000. Good job Riley and Courtney!!
You were quoted $5k in labor 20 years ago? How many days would an electrician need to do the job?
About 20 years ago I was quoted close to $1000 just to replace a chandelier. Only reason I called someone is I didn't have a tall enough ladder to do it. Buying a ladder was way cheaper 😂
For pulling wire, use a leaf blower to blow a string through the pipe. Use this string to run a rope heavy enough to pull the wire. Tie the rope to the wire. Pull on the rope to pull the wire. Wipe some grease on the wire so it slides through the pipe.
Or use a vacuum with a plastic bag tied to the string
Or a shop vac with plastic grocery bag
Not grease. Wire pulling lube or dish soap. Would have made pulling the mains SO much easier.
The sell wire lube for getting these cables through the conduit. Also, while you're doing all this, think about where you might need conduits later. They are super easy to install (and cap) now.
Not grease -- use pulling compound. Much less messy.
Riley you are a Jack of all trades. Love watching you, Courtney and wee Oliver. See you next week!
A shop vac, grocery bag and pull string works great for pulling that thru conduit.
I agree. Personally, I have done this.
Considering you’re not a professional contractor electrician or HVAC person, you did an outstanding job. I really enjoyed watching your process and wish you all well. Cheers from Canada. 🇨🇦💝🇺🇸🙏🥰👍
FYI, if you made the cables for your critical loads longer, you could have wired them directly into the critical load center without the splices in the main breaker box.
Yes, while not required by code, it is good general practice to not have splices in a load center. Waste a little more wire but well worth it later. No connector is perfect so every one is a failure point risk.
Where does he make his feed from if he's not splicing it in the breaker box?
@@Carrs-Firm-Foundations Make the wires long enough to just pass through to the final connection.
@@markpashia7067 So basically instead of splicing it into the main breaker box you should run a new feed from the sub panel direct to the outlet / lights wanted in acase of an outage.
Great job Riley. I'm lucky enough to know a Master Electrician that allows me to "phone a friend" which saves me a lot of headaches with the inspector. Only thing I would ad is that your forget to pay yourself for doing the work, when you calculate the total savings, your time is definitely worth money for sure :-D. You also saved a TON of money by not having to use the Ground fault and Arc Fault breakers on your house. Almost all my circuits here require them, and also a whole house surge protector. I would recommend one of those for your houses, saves a LOT of equipment incase of lighting strikes.
Especially with that metal roof which should have it's own ground system installed. Even if they are isolated from roof and wiring system, lightning jumps all kinds of crazy paths. I have seen it follow a wet wood handrail for thirty feet and go through wood siding before finding a copper wire and wrecking a house. We spent days tick tracing the wiring to find all the broken wires in that A frame house patching each break as needed. Usually pulling new wire into covered walls and ceilings. All because they put a metal sail boat mast as a flag pole from the ground and hooked to the deck railing above for support. Yet they never thought to ground the bottom of that aluminum mast. Wow!!! Needless to say, they paid us to put a ground rod and wire to that mast as part of the job. It would not have run that hand rail if it had an easier path to ground.
Whole house surge protection is now required in many jurisdictions, and GFI and Arc Fault protection should be required - protect humans and home!
I thought GFI breakers were REQUIRED for outlets near wet areas. i.e. bathrooms, kitchens, exterior outlets, etc.
Yes, saved a $50 per breaker by not installing AFCI breakers, because who doesn't enjoy a good arc fault fire? Saving $20K on labor, but not installing AFCI is a rookie error.
@@donmajkol2856 - They are. 2023 NEC requires GFCI in: (1) Bathrooms. (2) Garages and accessory buildings. (3) Outdoors. (4) Crawl spaces (at or below grade). (5) Basements. (6) Kitchens (now including range receptacle, refrigerator receptacle, disposal receptacle, and microwave receptacle). (7) Food or beverage preparation or cooking areas. (8) Sinks (receptacles within 6 ft of the top inside edge of the bowl of a dwelling unit sink). (9) Boathouses. (10) Bathtubs or shower stalls (receptacles within 6 ft of the outside edge of a bathtub or shower stall not installed within a bathroom). (11) Laundry areas. (12) Damp and Wet Locations Indoors.
And the 2023 NEC requires AFCI breakers as well: All 120-volt, single-phase, 15- and 20-ampere branch circuits supplying outlets or devices installed in dwelling unit kitchens, family rooms, dining rooms, living rooms, parlors, libraries, dens, bedrooms, sunrooms, recreation rooms, closets, hallways, laundry areas, or similar rooms or areas.
When wiring a multistage wire to a solid wire always extend the multistage wire 1/16th inch past the solid wire to allow the wire nut to grab the multistage first, works every time.
Wire nuts suck. Once you try Wagos, you'll never want to go back to wire nuts for anything.
@@Wrenchmonkey1except for when your doing anything over 12 gauge. Also, try sticking a handful of 5 port wagos in a box, then try it with red wire nuts. You’ll change your attitude. There’s nothing wrong with wagos, but they’re not the end all be all of wire connections
@@wm79198 Sure, there are some situations where you might HAVE to grudgingly use wire nuts, but what I said was once you use them, you'll never WANT to go back. If you find yourself in a situation where you have no other choice, then so be it.
@ no, there are situations where YOU might grudgingly use a wire but. I, on the other hand, am happy to use wirenuts in plenty of situations.
Please don't give electrical advices
I ran over 300 ft of metal clad in my new 26x40 metal building. It was a LOT of work. Especially, the lights and wire 15 ft up. It turned out great, but I now have a new found respect for electrician’s work!
A fishtape and line lube would make running wire so much easier.
Your doing a fantastic job there Riley...Youve passed the electrical inspection as well...good work....Stay safe and see you soon
Interesting idea using the plum bob.
Riley, You should check on using the "Wagos". Some states are not accepting them. The amount of current can be more than the "thin" metal connectors can carry without failing. NC has applied some strong restrictions on the use. Our son is part of a restoration business in NC.
Certainly one of the best episodes yet. The newest Jackery unit is beast!
Still don't get why critical loads only. Just let me connect everything. I know when there is an outage not not use over the limit...
Great job again guy’s, love watching the build and how it is all coming along.
Great work. A video of electrical is tough to make entertaining, it was fun to watch.
Hello from DeerPark Washington.
Wishing you all the best for the upcoming winter. ❤ It's getting cold around here , stay safe and warm. 🎉
Saved $20,000 and earned $1,000,000 in personal satisfaction of a job well learned and well done. 😊👍👏👏👏
I've used 60 of those puck lights on my homestead build. Have used them in two other homes and love them.
Can you wire your own home? ABSOLUTELY. Starting from studs it's actually pretty straightforward and the rules aren't complicated.
I would think it would depend on your state. I believe here in Oklahoma you have to be a
licensed electrician.
so many folks think wiring is easy-well there are many rules to be followed and code is only a minimum-I hate following up wiring that a home owner as done -so much non compliance and cheap Charlie work!!!
@@dalekronk496 and after licenced elektrician need inspector come check all and measure all wires and ground and make papers can use this house wiring.
I believe you can wire your own home in every state. You might have to get an electrician in to inspect and approve it all before the building inspector and connecting to the grid. Otherwise home improvement stores would not sell any wire , fixtures, conduit, etc. to non-electricians.
@@BigGuy8059 I'm a dumb ass. Lol. I didn't think about that.
Riley, you can tell your friend Andy that excavators ARE shovels. Really, REALLY big shovels... About pulling wires through conduit, it's best to use a shop vac to suck the string through. As for the big drop out of the meter, it's best to run the wire through the conduit before you glue it in place. It's much easier to fit the pieces with the wire already in them than it is to pull the cables afterwards. If you want help with plumbing and the rest of it, I'd be more than happy to join you and help out. Having been a general contractor I know a fair bit about building a house.
Courtney is going to have soooo much taping and mudding and sanding to do when you dry wall this house!
drywall not newer need more than putty at seam and seam paper and sanding and then have all ready to paint, not need mud anywere, totally pre-history old worst system.
I am OBSESSED! I binged this series start to finish on Saturday. Can't wait to follow you though the rest of this journey!
In Ohio the quick disconnect has to be accessible outside the house so emergency services can access it. It typically mounts next to the meter.
There’s a main breaker in the meter box
You mean a firefighter won't want to go under a burning house to cut off the electricity?
@@chrisendres9194 So this disconnect under the house is unnecessary, redundant?
@@markstipulkoski1389 - Yes. That shouldn't be required with a main disconnecting means at the service.
The power company needs to disconnect the power prior to pulling a meter.
Good save , I do my own wiring install and have foe many projects, I am a retired engineer and at 72 who knows how much I saved over the many moves renovations and builds through the years , I do admire your pioneering can do attitude. Well done!
You need plastic bushings after the lock nuts on your feeder pipes in the boxs
Why? It's PVC plastic already..
@robertgregory2618 it's code
That is only for metal conduit.
Using plastic bushings on PVC, is like putting on a condom over an another condom.
@donmajkol2856 it's code in Florida
It's required on the larger conduit sizes.
Great job Riley and congratulations on passing your inspection!
My friend and I have a motto. The job is never finished until there is blood!
That’s the truth! 😂
I always leave my dna for future generations
The task always demands a blood sacrifice!
if come blood have totally amateur and worst worker.
We always say that once you bleed for a job it'll be successful.
Riley can do ANYTHING ❕❕❕ Yay, you are killing it ! I’m so impressed. Super awesome saving by DIY. ❤❤❤
32:13 so does that mean I get to come help?! Baha! Doing great guys!
I can tell you as an electrician superintendent you do better than most of our electricians in our company and our helpers. And the fact that you're an amateur at this blows my mind. Keep up the great work.
A good electrical inspector is a pleasure to work with. My inspector had some great practical suggestions of things I had missed on my wiring, and even complimented my work which I hadn't expected. He said he can usually tell in the first 30 seconds if the inspection is going to be a problem based on the homeowners attention to detail. Homeowners typically screw up on things they didn't know about, where problematic ones are issues of corner cutting or laziness. Thanks for posting the video!
Wagos are awesome. I had to change out a kitchen outlet to GFI, and there were 6 wires inside the existing box! The original connections were with wire nuts, and were very sketchy. Changed them all to Wagos, and they were much more secure and easy to get pushed into the box because you can position the wires before connecting them.
You should also wire in an outlet below the toilet, because even if you don’t, eventually, somebody will want to put a bidet or a Toto toilet, which would require electricity. I would also run all of my network wiring for things like stereos TVs and computers. Anything that you can think of in the future now that the walls are open, you wanna run anything you can think of.
Working over a toilet to install a bidet outlet is awful. They usually need a home run too.
From Australia, amazed that you are allowed to use bare copper in your wiring, I started my electrical apprenticeship in 1983 and bare copper earths were not allowed under our national wiring rules even then. Mind you we use 240/415V for our domestic housing not 110/240. Plus if a copper earths stake went in that easy we would have had to add a copper sulphate solution to the soil improve the connection to ensure the connection to earth was good enough.
240/415V? I’m not an electrician by any means… does that mean you basically run 3 phase to residential buildings? I wish the states would standardize 240v for everything. Less amperage equals a cheaper electric bill.
I wish I could get 3 phase in my shop without a phase converter. The fabrication equipment is dirt cheap here!
Dewalt makes a powered stapler for the wire. You can staple two wires at a time.
Back in BI times (Before Internet) I finished a downstairs basement. Did all the plumbing, and electrical myself, including putting in a sub-panel and wiring 240 for baseboard electric heat. I learned a little from my Dad about basic electrical circuitry, but had to READ up on pretty much every element from putting in a sub-panel in the garage to running wire through the ceiling and down through one wall to get to the basement (with 3 circuits). Learned from the code book how to run wire on studs, where/how to cut studs and put in metal plates to protect them, how to run 3 way switches for overhead lights in a few rooms, etc. It was quite the learning experience. What made me proud at the end was having the inspector ask who did the work and when I said with a bit of trepidation- me. He proceeded to tell me it was some of the cleanest wiring he had seen and everything was run to code.
Needless to say I was proud of myself and as you can tell, still am to this day (literally over 30 years later). I have since done many an electrical job myself and consider it a very good learned skill to have. While there are certainly reasons and situations to engage a professional (for example it can be a bit challenging wiring some circuits and doing some breaker box activities), I think it's a very logical and methodical process once you understand the basics of how electricity flows. With today's resources on the internet and video's readily available from experts, I can see it being so much easier to learn.
11:10 - I think you will need longer earth rods. In Denmark where I live, with RCD’s at 30mA, the resistance to earth can’t exceed 1666 ohm over the course of a year. Dry sand give some problems.. 😅😅
This is America not Denmark.
@ - ahhhh… 🙃🙃🙃 Just pointing it out… wild you don’t need to measure it, when it has to do with safety..
@@jackryan8719 are you dumb? It was a comparison of standard he clearly prefaced what he was saying by stating where he was.. unfortunately for Americans like you that make the rest of us look bad to the rest of the world, we are attached to the same planet, and ground works the same all around earth 🤦🏾♂️
The aquifer in the area they are in is about 8 feet down most of the year.
They do ...they need 8 feet where he is he used 8 feet rods @@thormeyer6198
If you put some kind of lubricant in the pipe , it makes pulling or pushing wire a whole lot easier . Also , wrap a little bit of tape over the ends of the wire so it doesn't get caught on the pipes joints . If you're using a covered wire for the " NEUTRAL " from the Meter to your Main shut off , make sure to mark with a colored tape which one it is .
Happy Trails from 🇨🇦 to the 🇺🇸 . ✌ out . L8R
Please stop putting the holes so close to the top or bottoms of the joists. The closer to the 2x4 the more force is in the OSB. Also the closer you are to hitting it with nails, screws, or drills when you make holes.
Typically you want to run services inside the middle 1/3 of the joist.
Came here to say this. I gasped when I saw that drill go through.
You two are AMAZING!!! Love your channel, always makes our Sunday way better!!!
You use a hammer to set the height of your receptical boxes. Place hammer next to stud and set box on top of hammer. Pinch box to stud with one hand and use hammer to fix it to stud.
That's how my dad did it 😊
Great job guys! So proud of you guys and gives me hope for the next generation!👍🏼🙏🏻
that is alot of savings wow good job Riley
Congratulations passing your electrical inspection you did well 👍👋🇨🇦
very happy to see you using WAGO connectors instead of wire nuts
wagos are awful-crap way of doing connections
best and safe way connect all wires use WAGO, old crewnut connector have illegal many country because burn many house down.
@@mattivirtaWhat! Wire nuts when properly installed have a near Zero failure rate. The best usage for lever nuts is connecting power to lighting fixtures.
I’m a retired industrial electrical.
@@monteglover4133 im have industial and home elektric engineerin ad automation engineer too and working ower 40 year home and industrial elektric and automation engineer many factory, corporation and country.
You can use a plastic shopping bag tied to the pull string and use shop vac on the other end to suck the pull string though. It can be done up to hundreds of yards.
Fill the bag with enough sand to fit in the tube it comes thru like a pig in a pipeline
it comes down to who you know. if your are calling a electrician/plumber/hvac off of google your getting bent over. i recommend any person who is building/remodeling to instead of google ing? for a contractor google new subdivision near you. go there during the week and get the information off of the contractors working their, they are for the most time sub-subcontractors and will give you the best pricing. ive seen electricians here in texas charge homeowners 20k+ for remodeling work when i haven't paid over
I think it is a reflection that there is a building boom in Northern Idaho, and hence rates favor the trades. OTOH, Idaho is one of the more homeowner DIY states in that you can do your electrical, HVAC, and plumbing. I will have an interesting time next year.
@@richdobbs6595 Fact is there is an extreme shortage of trades people because of everyone going into computer tech several decades ago.
That's fricken awesome, that yall were able to accomplish that on your own. And that you were able to save that much money. Plus you managed to do it quickly. Bravo and a job well done !
First US person I see on youtube using wagos, finaly, thank you and god that you dont use wire nuts :D
Wire nuts are excellent and give you a better connection and just as fast to use in the hands of a professional!
@thomasjeffersoncry that was always discusion on internet which one is better, you have a lot of tests here on youtube like amp rating etc for that.
I do electricity for my job, and for last 10 years i use only wagos, when you scure it good, you can hang from it with no problem, and there are less mistakes with them, while wire nuts at least in europe rearly people use, and every time i found it on old instalstion, it was loose, due to years of wires heating and cooling.
@@MarkoAndjelic I am an Electrician with over 40 years experience, wire nuts have come a long way, with better ones all the time, todays wire nuts are excellent.
they never loosen if installed good and tight with the wires twisted properly. I have watched the Wago videos and they cannot handle the loads of a wire nut. Lazy installers is where the problem would be with wire nuts, not the nut itself.
@@thomasjeffersoncry Wire nuts may be good for install but if you have to find a fault nothing beats lever wagos!😉
And twisting copper more than a couple of times work hardens the copper...🙄
@@animarkzero Wagos are like most new things, not good products.
Great job Riley! I was lucky to have spent a year working with an electrical contractor in my early 20's and saved me a ton of money being able to do my own electrical for nearly 50 years. How about running a conduit from basement electrical area to roof area for future solar?
WOW , 20 K saving ? that's one hell of a chunk of change
Love your channel and you guys are the cutest couple. One easy trick to pulling pull string through existing conduit is to attach a nut or something to the string and use a shop vac at other end. I’ve pulled string over a hundred feet with several 45 and 90 degree bends and has never failed me. Just a quick tip I thought many people knew about.
Use a rag tied to the string and suck it through the conduit with a shop vac.
I do all my own electrical work, don’t trust anyone else. That is a major job you are undertaking and y’all are doing a fantastic job!!
I’m not an electrician, but I would have fed the wires outside the house through the pipes before assembling and gluing together. Also on the inside between the shutoff box and the breaker box, I would have used a metal pipe, to avoid accidentally penetrating the plastic one with a fastener sometime now or in the future during a remodel.
I am an electrician and the correct way to feed wires is after the conduit is assembled
if you tried it one time with those feeder conductors, you wouldn't attempt it again.
@@htdgwtr1 Yes it is. So many fail to recognize that his way has issues. The concept of a conduit is a permanent pathway for replacing wires. And that reaming the inside of any cut and proper gluing so that none enters the pipe is critical to the future. Only apply glue to the male part and push together such that no glue is pushed inside the conduit. Hard to control that with wire in the way.
@@chrism2042I ran 4/0 se through 160’ of conduit piecewise once, and I didn’t think it was that bad.
@@BrianKrahmer - Through straight runs wouldn't be bad but working it through 90's and LB's while glueing the conduit can be a pain.
Tip on the knock outs on your I joists. Use the claw of the hammer to knock them out. Focuses the force to start, then switch to the face of the hammer once it’s started.
I just started watching about a month ago and you and your wife have a great channel. I can't believe you took on wiring your house. Great job!
You should watch their road building videos. Awesome!
Splendid effort on the wiring of your house everything is progressing nicely.
not everybody has a big shovel with a motor cool move!!
To neatly wire the breaker box, do all grounds first, then do all whites, then do all blacks
I find this and the way shown very strange. :) I’m afraid of losing track of which wires are which
Drill from both sides and you avoid the "splintering" of the block.
Stay in the open are of the block as well..
@@SegoManthey filled the cores of the blocks with concrete, which is harder to drill through.
When you’re nailing into a cramped area you could always use a pair of pliers instead of a pry bar. Because what you do initially is grip the nail shank halfway up and then hit the pliers as close as you can to the nail and then move it up and repeat, then at the head hold the pliers on the head of the nail and hit the pliers until seated (I learned that when I was younger (it also works in reverse too).
When running heavy gage wire use a lube like cable lubricant or straight washing up liquid (washing detergent).
I also hope you remembered to to use coloured electrical tape eg red, blue, yellow and green? That way you connect red to red, blue to blue etc etc.
add conduit for cat6 / fiber / low voltage wiring before you close up the walls. The one thing I wish every new construction did was include a path for future upgrades.
Why cat6 and not cat7?
@@developerfabi conduit doesn't care.
Nah, “Everything that can be invented has been invented," Charles H. Duell, Commissioner of the U.S. Patent Office , 1899.
Good call, too many people never think past today. Conduit is cheap comparatively!
I did it on my house, and it was a God-send. Smurf tubing for the win!
@@DashiellParr411 Conduit everywhere when the walls are open is cheaper than running just one wire through a wall.
Congrats on passing the electrical inspection!! ❤
If you have a chance before drywall goes up, run a 50A to the garage for future electric vehicles.
50 amp for rv hookup
And or welders Ect
Screw you EV BS.
Having an EV charging or even parked under the house may add to or cost even void some house insurance policies.
I dont know what your insurances are like over there but in Australia they are getting very expensive and difficult to deal with, some wont insure flats, unit, houses or rentals with an EV because of potential fire risk.
electric cars are not the future
In my state , # 12 wire is required in the bathrooms along with ground GFI breaker or in the first receptacle. Kitchens the same with separate circuits for appliances. Bedrooms require arc fault breaker for each circuit. Garage requires #12 gauge wire on each circuit with a GFI at the beginning of each run or GFI breaker. Check with your building inspector or state building codes before it's to late.
19:50 WAGO are great, i use this for ages 👍
Couple of hints I learned along the way....BUT great work!!!! 1) use pull lube when pulling through conduit. Helps immensely! 2) For unspooling NM, an 8" building tube fits perfectly inside the inner diameter of the coil of wire. This makes unspooling so much easier. (your ladder and rod would have worked)
The number of portable battery banks you guys have over the years, lol.
Who needs electrical, each outlet is it's own battery with individual solar 😅
House is coming along great! One of the more fun projects to watch for sure