I like the way you think.  We may have to send you an invitation to join the 
bigger is better club too...
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ron Yearns 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, February 15, 2010 12:24 PM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] How many connections are feasible.


    
  Yes you would be daisy chaining from fixture to fixture.. The large blue wire 
nuts can if needed cover six or seven number 12 wires together, but you have to 
strip them a bit longer than normal twist them together then if needed trim 
with cutters then install the wire at more as a cover and tightened. Usually 
for this many connections a much larger box becomes necessary. Personally I use 
number 12 wire for lights and outlets. Theoretical limit of 2400 watts. Code 
says no greater than 80 percent continuous load giving you 1,920 watts. That's 
a lot of light bulbs. You only have to buy one circuit breaker and one power 
line as well as fewer box connectors. All a money saving. By the way the 2008 
code requires arc fault breakers on all circuits other than special duty and 
ground fault protected ones. These breakers cost $40 to $60 each whether 15 or 
20 amp. You do the math one circuit or two.
  Ron
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dan Rossi 
  To: Blind Handyman List 
  Sent: Monday, February 15, 2010 8:56 AM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] How many connections are feasible.

  OK, lets say I've got this idea of having a single circuit for all the 
  lights on the second floor of my house. That way, if an air conditioner 
  overloads a circuit, or my wife throws the toaster into the shower while 
  I'm in there, none of the lights will go out. I believe it is pretty rare 
  for a light fixture to overload a circuit, although it is possible. But I 
  just thought it would be a cool concept to have a breaker that says, all 
  lights on second floor.

  In my house, I think this is doable in that a 15 amp circuit can handle 
  1440 Watts. 1440 Watts is a hell of a lot of attic.

  OK, so how do you wire this? I can't imagine that it works to run say six 
  or eight sets of wires from various light fixtures to one box, and one 
  power line. Then try and tie 7 or 9 black wires together and 7 or 9 
  whites together. I wouldn't think you could twist that many wires 
  together.

  So, do you just run the power to the first fixture, then jump to the next 
  fixture, and daisy chain your way along, wiring a switch in parallel for 
  each fixture?

  -- 
  Blue skies.
  Dan Rossi
  Carnegie Mellon University.
  E-Mail: [email protected]
  Tel: (412) 268-9081

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