Bottom line is that your local municipality is going to have the final word. What I have found, is that many municipalities base their codes off of NEC, and will tweek them as and where needed. There are some municipalities that have their own codes completely, one being the city of Chicago. Was a time for instance when we couldn't put telephone cable in a building that was not in conduit, at the same time the city of New York was allowing teflon coated sheath plenum cable in walls and ceilings, no conduit. Bottom line, your local code guys are going to have the final say so. Pickup a copy of their code, and it might even say that is based off of NEC. I have run into that before, so NEC they got. And then again, NEC allows for romex for residential so long as does not go 3' below ground level, and I lived in a village that did not allow romex. The electrical inspector of my village back then had romex throughout his home. I asked what if his house ever burns down, village code says no romex, and insurance inspectors come in and find romex, "What then?". I don't remember what his answer was. I sold the house long before the housing bubble and made a pretty good profit though, that I remember, no romex.
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Today's Featured Article - Restoration Story: 1964 JD 2010 Dsl - Part 2 - by Jim Nielsen. Despite having to disassemble the majority of my John Deere 2010's diesel engine, I was still hopeful I could leave the engine-complete with crankshaft and camshaft-in the tractor. This would make the whole engine rebuild job much easier-and much less expensive! I soon found however, that the #4 conrod bearing had disintegrated, taking with it chunks of the crankshaft journal. As a resul
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