National Electrical Code.
—The details governing the size, the manner of placing and securing wires in buildings is included in the regulations published by the National Board of Fire Underwriters as the National Electric Code. Likewise the mechanical construction of all apparatus dealing with electric distribution is definitely specified so that manufacturers furnish reliable materials for all requirements. In the specifications for furnishing buildings with the use of electricity, descriptions are made of the desired types and styles of the switches and various other fixtures to suit the requirements.
Electric Light Wiring.
—In the equipment of a house for the use of electricity, the wiring, together with distributing panel, the various outlets, receptacles, switches, and other appliances that make up the system, is of more than passing consequence. In the construction of the electric system it is important that the wires and their installation be done in a manner to meet every contingency.
The following descriptions for electric house wiring were taken from a set of specifications published by the Bryant Electric Co. as applying to buildings of wood frame construction. The specifications serve as explanations for the appliances required in an ordinary dwelling. The specifications are for the least expensive form of good practice in wiring for frame buildings. They would not be permitted in large cities where further protection from fire is required and where more rigid rules are demanded by the Board of Fire Underwriters.
1. System.—The circuit wiring shall be installed as a two-wire direct current or alternating system. Not more than 16 outlets or a maximum of 660 watts shall be placed on any one circuit, allowing 110 watts for each baseboard plug connection or extension outlet and 55 watts for each 16 candlepower lamp indicated at the various wall and ceiling outlets on plans. All wiring shall be installed as a concealed knob-and-tube system.
The type of wiring is designated as a two-wire direct or alternating current system in order that there shall be no doubt as to the method of wiring to be used. There are other methods that might be employed that need not be discussed here.
The 16 outlets mentioned are intended to cover all lamps or plug attachments that are to be used for heaters, fans, motors, or any other electric device. The 660 watts at 110 volts pressure will require 6 amperes in the main wires of the circuit, which is the maximum current the wires are intended to carry. This does not mean that 110-watt lamps might not be used but that no single circuit shall carry lamps that will aggregate more than 660 watts.
The concealed knob-and-tube system mentioned is illustrated in Figs. 263 and 264, in which the wires which pass through joists and studding are to be insulated by porcelain tubes and those wires which lay parallel to these members are to be fastened to porcelain knobs which are secured by screws to the wood pieces to prevent any possibility of coming into contact with electric conducting materials.