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My small 1-car garage (future shop) had no power until electricians recently rewired portions of our upstairs, leaving me with two new dedicated 20A circuits to build from. I'm planning a work table in the back corner that will extend down the wall over time. These outlets are for basic power tools, and maybe more down the road. I could easily bring 240V nearby directly from the panel in the future for heavy tools.
For now, I want two switches of lights (two fixtures each), and four GFCI duplex outlets in two 2-gang boxes near the switches. I have already run each 20A circuit to one of the 2-gang outlet boxes, and one of those runs on to the switches.
I have a few questions about the details of how I set it up, and adjusting things down the road, since the wiring will also become encased in a shear wall and be inaccessible.
1) I believe I am better off putting both light switches together on a circuit with one outlet box. Then, I could change the other outlet box to a dedicated 20A outlet in the future? The down side is both lights can be put out if their circuit trips.
2) I initially bought four GFCI outlets without realizing I could use two GFCIs to protect two regular outlets. Is there a compelling reason to use GFCIs in all four outlet locations? Aside from in the same box one doesn't trip the other?
3) I also believe I should wire the lights to divert around the GFCI so they are not interrupted? This is ok in a garage?
Thanks for the help on these last few things,
Aaron
For now, I want two switches of lights (two fixtures each), and four GFCI duplex outlets in two 2-gang boxes near the switches. I have already run each 20A circuit to one of the 2-gang outlet boxes, and one of those runs on to the switches.
I have a few questions about the details of how I set it up, and adjusting things down the road, since the wiring will also become encased in a shear wall and be inaccessible.
1) I believe I am better off putting both light switches together on a circuit with one outlet box. Then, I could change the other outlet box to a dedicated 20A outlet in the future? The down side is both lights can be put out if their circuit trips.
2) I initially bought four GFCI outlets without realizing I could use two GFCIs to protect two regular outlets. Is there a compelling reason to use GFCIs in all four outlet locations? Aside from in the same box one doesn't trip the other?
3) I also believe I should wire the lights to divert around the GFCI so they are not interrupted? This is ok in a garage?
Thanks for the help on these last few things,
Aaron