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Hi everyone...I've been a long time user of this forum, but this is my first post. I was wondering if anyone has experienced or heard of the following situation:
I'm currently in the process of a near-total rewiring of my house. Most of the wiring in the house is original (1953), except for the wiring in a small addition and a new 200A service panel (early 1990's). The new service panel tied into the old wiring at the old fuse box, which became a junction box. Basically, three separate 10/3 romex cables on six 20A breakers at the new service panel fed all the wiring in 90% of the house.
Anyway, the house was becoming overloaded and the old wires were starting to degrade, so I decided on the whole house rewire. I am still using the "new" 1990's service panel, but I did add 2 new subpanels so that I could have enough slots for all the new breakers, and I wanted to use AFCI. I live in Indiana, so AFCI is not required here.
In Indiana, home owners are allowed to pull permits and do their own electrical work. I of course pulled the county permits and decided to have four separate rough-in inspections, which the county said was fine. I have a full time job, so this electrical project is a night and weekend sort of thing. I am doing the project in stages so the entire house isn't without electricity at any one time.
I finished all of the ground work (subpanels, etc), and installed the wiring in 25% of the house before my first rough-in inspection. I passed with no red flags and just a couple of suggestions (closet lights controlled by a light switch and hardwired smoke detectors in all bedrooms). For the second rough-in inspection, I addressed all the issues from the first inspection and completed the wiring in the next 25% of the house.
After the second rough-in inspection, the inspector passed me on the final inspection. He said that everything looked professional and was being completed above and beyond code. He told me to keep going like I was going and complete the project, but that there was no reason to have the rest of the work inspected by the county. I have an inspection report from the county that says that project is complete, no problems with the installation.
Is this strange? Should I be concerned about this? Has anyone else experienced this sort of thing?
Thanks to anyone with advice!
I'm currently in the process of a near-total rewiring of my house. Most of the wiring in the house is original (1953), except for the wiring in a small addition and a new 200A service panel (early 1990's). The new service panel tied into the old wiring at the old fuse box, which became a junction box. Basically, three separate 10/3 romex cables on six 20A breakers at the new service panel fed all the wiring in 90% of the house.
Anyway, the house was becoming overloaded and the old wires were starting to degrade, so I decided on the whole house rewire. I am still using the "new" 1990's service panel, but I did add 2 new subpanels so that I could have enough slots for all the new breakers, and I wanted to use AFCI. I live in Indiana, so AFCI is not required here.
In Indiana, home owners are allowed to pull permits and do their own electrical work. I of course pulled the county permits and decided to have four separate rough-in inspections, which the county said was fine. I have a full time job, so this electrical project is a night and weekend sort of thing. I am doing the project in stages so the entire house isn't without electricity at any one time.
I finished all of the ground work (subpanels, etc), and installed the wiring in 25% of the house before my first rough-in inspection. I passed with no red flags and just a couple of suggestions (closet lights controlled by a light switch and hardwired smoke detectors in all bedrooms). For the second rough-in inspection, I addressed all the issues from the first inspection and completed the wiring in the next 25% of the house.
After the second rough-in inspection, the inspector passed me on the final inspection. He said that everything looked professional and was being completed above and beyond code. He told me to keep going like I was going and complete the project, but that there was no reason to have the rest of the work inspected by the county. I have an inspection report from the county that says that project is complete, no problems with the installation.
Is this strange? Should I be concerned about this? Has anyone else experienced this sort of thing?
Thanks to anyone with advice!