Why Are Electricians Arrogant?

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2019
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Komentáře • 3,2K

  • @mikenaples4046
    @mikenaples4046 Před 4 lety +1366

    It’s unbelievable how he calls electricians arrogant and then proceeds to butcher some electrical work.

    • @dylanlink9798
      @dylanlink9798 Před 4 lety +84

      Makes you cringe doesn't it.

    • @MegaDirtyberty
      @MegaDirtyberty Před 4 lety +24

      Then why did you watch the video?.

    • @in_significant
      @in_significant Před 4 lety +12

      Irony is great!

    • @slanwar
      @slanwar Před 4 lety +52

      To tell you the true we had an electrician at work and he was arrogant as hell, I'm a computer tech and by New Jersey law now we need to have a certified electrician to run internet cable... nice check our democrat politicians received from the the electricians union for sure.

    • @jessicale7986
      @jessicale7986 Před 4 lety

      @Quayd Korman From the IBEW website, under the "Politcal Spending" Tab:
      www.unionfacts.com/union/International_Brotherhood_of_Electrical_Workers#political-tab
      Donations to Democrats
      $29,583,815 (96%)
      Donations to Republicans
      $968,170 (3%)
      527 Spending
      A union's 527 committee makes contributions to political candidates and other organizations for the purpose of influencing the outcome of an election. Unlike Political Action Committees, which are strictly regulated by the Federal Election Commission, 527s are regulated by the IRS. These committees are often considered a form of "soft money."
      Total 527 Expenditures
      $51,576,329
      Federal Lobbying
      Total Spent Lobbying
      $17,311,850
      Of course, the IBEW expects nothing in return, like laws requiring licensed electricians to run internet cable. Note that they give very little to Republicans. Maybe because their votes aren't for sale!

  • @raymondburdick5761
    @raymondburdick5761 Před 4 lety +64

    As a union electrician, that was very hard to watch I want to fix all of it for him

  • @jcrispyd9281
    @jcrispyd9281 Před 3 lety +64

    “12-3, 12 being the size of the wire and 3 being the 3 wires” It’s 12-2 man 12-3 has the red power too.- 15 y/o electrician

    • @FCES_Electrical_Sol
      @FCES_Electrical_Sol Před 3 lety +3

      😆😆😆, love this

    • @jasrenfro9856
      @jasrenfro9856 Před 3 lety +5

      I didn't know electricians could be 15 years old 🤣👌 I'm not taking advise from a 15 year electrician
      ..

    • @jcrispyd9281
      @jcrispyd9281 Před 3 lety +4

      @@jasrenfro9856 ok lmao

    • @Wolfgang-et7vz
      @Wolfgang-et7vz Před 3 lety +4

      @@jasrenfro9856 I’m a journeyman electrician and he’s not wrong the dude in the video is a major hack I would not take notes on his electrical skills he violates several codes throughout the video

    • @JUUD79
      @JUUD79 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jasrenfro9856 I laughed

  • @glenndavis5743
    @glenndavis5743 Před 4 lety +76

    Licensed Master Electrician here. Hope you never have someone learn from your video and then someone dies because you do not follow the code, which is LAW.

    • @danielmeyer403
      @danielmeyer403 Před 3 lety +2

      Ditto, Master Electrician and Service Technician (40 yrs) here as well. We could make a code seminar out of this video. Was painful to watch. He better hope no inspectors were watching.

    • @feyrband
      @feyrband Před 2 lety

      You realize NEC is not law everywhere right? It's just a reference guide book until jurisdictions actually adopt it, which not all do.

    • @larrypatterson3839
      @larrypatterson3839 Před rokem

      We have a saying in
      Chicago , " Amateurs teach amateurs how to be amateurs" one more for effect ,
      If a job is hard give me a min., If it's imposible,
      give me two".

  • @tastytherrien5106
    @tastytherrien5106 Před 4 lety +767

    "Electricity is simple"
    Has neutral bonded to ground in sub panel.
    Oh and after you fix that.
    You're not supposed to use a receptacle to jump a neutral.
    Ground the damn box.
    Dont sleeve romex into conduit.
    And for the love of God it's called twelve two with ground.
    How's that for primadonna?

    • @JustinL614
      @JustinL614 Před 4 lety +19

      @prevail223 Not really but it's more expensive than using wire off a reel.

    • @t0kinl3lunts
      @t0kinl3lunts Před 4 lety +38

      @prevail223I believe you need to derate it, or at least calc. the load if you do. The jacket bunches the wires together, so... according to code it's not the same thing as 3 separate conductors and ground.

    • @thelyingscotsman7993
      @thelyingscotsman7993 Před 4 lety +35

      Tyler this guy has fanboys who hang on his every word,in reality he knows nothing about the subject. With him it's his way or it's wrong. Primadonna sums him up nicely.

    • @justinjohnson8221
      @justinjohnson8221 Před 4 lety +9

      Electricity isn’t that hard, people made it hard than it needed to be.

    • @tastytherrien5106
      @tastytherrien5106 Před 4 lety +12

      @Mario the little tabs on receptacles that bond the screws together aren't rated to carry what the wire should. You can't depend on it to keep the neutral path continuous

  • @patricksullivan3837
    @patricksullivan3837 Před 4 lety +454

    An arrogant electrician wouldn't have ran nmsc in emt and would have definitely grounded the boxes.

    • @aaronwidder9624
      @aaronwidder9624 Před 4 lety +73

      Coming from an arrogant electrician, I definitely agree.😂 If you think it's expensive hiring a electrician, try hiring a inexperienced one.

    • @lars00bakker
      @lars00bakker Před 4 lety +2

      Oof

    • @caden01691
      @caden01691 Před 4 lety +34

      Right! If he knew anything he would've wire nutted pig tails and bonded boxes. Also, why didn't he buy a ground bus/lug for the sub? Neutral and ground are only supposed to be bonded at the first POS. Needs to get off his high horse talking about "it feels so good to do something right" lmao

    • @Squat5000
      @Squat5000 Před 4 lety +12

      Yes, NM cable can be in conduit and should be protected when exposed requiring protection from physical damage. So here we go again, the ignorant calling others arrogant. And no, those boxes do not always need to be grounded as there is an uninsulated independent ground and metallic yokes, but they still should in at least one spot in my opinion. I have found a good electrician to be a dime a dozen. And with as exclusive as that trade is, folks ought to be careful to call them out when doing a shitty job.
      Other violations, sure call him out on them. But before you start commenting, make sure what little you have to say is right or you are part of the problem.
      ARTICLE 334 Nonmetallic-Sheathed Cable: Types NM, NMC, and NMS
      II. Installation
      334.15 Exposed Work. In exposed work, except as provided in 300.11(A), cable shall be installed as specified in 334.15(A) through (C).
      (B) Protection from Physical Damage. Cable shall be protected from physical damage where necessary by rigid metal conduit, intermediate metal conduit, electrical metallic tubing, Schedule 80 PVC conduit, Type RTRC marked with the suffix -XW, or other approved means. Where passing through a floor, the cable shall be enclosed in rigid metal conduit, intermediate metal conduit, electrical metallic tubing, Schedule 80 PVC conduit, Type RTRC marked with the suffix -XW, or other approved means extending at least 150 mm (6 in.) above the floor. [ROP 7-94] Type NMC cable installed in shallow chases or grooves in masonry, concrete, or adobe shall be protected in accordance with the requirements in 300.4(F) and covered with plaster, adobe, or similar finish.
      250.146 (A) Surface Mounted Box. Where the box is mounted on the surface, direct metal to metal contact between the device yoke and the box or a contact yoke or a self grounding receptacle shall be permitted to ground the receptacle to the box.

    • @frenchmontana961
      @frenchmontana961 Před 4 lety +67

      As soon as he pointed to the roll of 12/2 and said "12/3" I knew I was in for a treat

  • @hookydoo
    @hookydoo Před 4 lety +28

    You absolutely have to separate the grounds from the neutrals in a sub fed panel. You just made your grounds current carrying wires.

  • @TheAndrewMaggie
    @TheAndrewMaggie Před 4 lety +310

    This video is the reason why you SHOULD hire an electrician.

    • @chancho00
      @chancho00 Před 3 lety +5

      @Doctor Mudd Also ground and neutral in the same buss bar in a subpanel, the irony.

    • @padraics
      @padraics Před 3 lety

      @@chancho00 and double tapped

    • @taylorjams4845
      @taylorjams4845 Před 2 lety

      As soon as he pulled out the romex, i knew this was gonna be bad.

  • @adamlucas1185
    @adamlucas1185 Před 4 lety +173

    I think every electrician had a little chuckle around the 14:00 mark when he talked about the pleasure of doing something right or fixing something someone else messed up lol.

    • @sglacf
      @sglacf Před 4 lety +4

      Baaaahhhaaaaa, so true

    • @guytech7310
      @guytech7310 Před 4 lety +3

      FWIW: I done a lot of my one electrical work and it passes inspection. I would have an electrician do it, but here it takes 6 months or more to schedule with an electrician due to many construction projects and too few local electricians.

    • @frenchmontana961
      @frenchmontana961 Před 4 lety +3

      @@guytech7310 an inspector can't catch all of your fuckups, dude. The NEC is a minimum standard, not guidelines for a good installation

    • @guytech7310
      @guytech7310 Před 4 lety +1

      @@frenchmontana961 Everything I do is commerical grade: MC & EMT (Yes with offsets). Before I start I check the Code and also research to figure out the best way to do it.

    • @freeinhabitant2422
      @freeinhabitant2422 Před 4 lety

      @@guytech7310 Yep, its not rocket science.

  • @skinny01717
    @skinny01717 Před 4 lety +465

    I may just be an apprentice electrician, but this video gives me an urge to drive over there and get it done correctly.

  • @JohnColombo
    @JohnColombo Před 4 lety +669

    "why are electricians arrogant?" Five years in school, and thousands of hours on the job so people like you can complain about us while creating a fire hazard on video... that's why.

    • @alanbain5779
      @alanbain5779 Před 4 lety +45

      Five years in school? What are you a doctor? Dont help this twit out by being arrogant. You are just an electrician.

    • @JohnColombo
      @JohnColombo Před 4 lety +85

      Yes we/I do/did spend 5 years in school that is not any sort of exaggeration. We don't just learn how to hang up ceiling fans in your house, we also learn how to build nuclear power houses, hospitals, and giant factories that make all the things you and I enjoy every day.

    • @alanbain5779
      @alanbain5779 Před 4 lety +22

      @@JohnColombo RELY???
      5 years of school and then 5 years of apprenticeship before you are an electrician??
      No you didnt. Please post what country you are from and the requirements of an electricians apprenticeship program.
      Ontario Canada
      Electrician - Construction and Maintenance is 9000 hours (approximately five years) consisting of 8160 hours of on-the-job work experience and 840 hours of in-school training
      USA with some variances between different states
      Register as an electrician apprentice or trainee
      Complete at least 720 hours of relevant classroom instruction through a state-approved school (can be part of an apprenticeship)
      Acquire at least 8,000 hours of supervised on-the-job experience from a certified electrician (can be part of an apprenticeship)
      Pass the state certification exam
      YOU WERE SAYING???

    • @robertopics
      @robertopics Před 4 lety +7

      People never realize the cost of running a business and liability costs.

    • @alanbain5779
      @alanbain5779 Před 4 lety +16

      @Quayd Korman to be clear. There is not 5 years of school and an apprenticeship. There is, in Canada, 840 hours of school WHILE you are an apprentice or 720 hours of school in the US. In the USA you are only required 8000 hours of apprenticeship. Canada 9000 hours. Texas is out there on it's own with 12000 hours.
      There is not a requirement of 5 years of school. Suggesting to people that there, is lying to them. Is the USA you are REQUIRED to do 18 full time weeks worth of in classroom education to become an electrician. Those 18 weeks are spread out over 5 years of apprenticeship.
      An electrician is just a trade like all the others. All the trades are required to do in classroom work and maintain their knowledge base throughout their careers.

  • @vismachman
    @vismachman Před 4 lety +159

    Reminds me of my Dad's favorite saying when confronted with something as janky as this: "What plumber wired this?"

  • @TheDelhiCowboy
    @TheDelhiCowboy Před 4 lety +653

    As an electrician, this guy is killing me... And probably anyone that touches his work

    • @kodiak_snuff_king2142
      @kodiak_snuff_king2142 Před 4 lety +9

      I came down to say the same thing he honestly didnt know the name was strippers🤦

    • @ascension6699
      @ascension6699 Před 4 lety +13

      @@kodiak_snuff_king2142 the "shielding or whatever its called." must be a non union residential guy.

    • @awickedtribe
      @awickedtribe Před 4 lety

      Waddya mean? Did you see the way he polished up that pig's ear, er, panel?

    • @awickedtribe
      @awickedtribe Před 4 lety +6

      @@ascension6699 Or just a union guy?

    • @ascension6699
      @ascension6699 Před 4 lety +2

      @@awickedtribe he's never done industrial, so not a union guy.

  • @joshjoseph1423
    @joshjoseph1423 Před 4 lety +526

    To all my fellow electricians out there
    How many code violations did you spot
    I hate when people that dont know what there doing try to teach others

    • @Mike13593
      @Mike13593 Před 4 lety +21

      Over 10 😂

    • @Mike13593
      @Mike13593 Před 4 lety +30

      Marty Vener I cringed when he stripped the romex. Jammed that utility knife in there so far he totally damaged the insulation on the wire. Seen it done many times by people that don’t even notice.

    • @nickm9123
      @nickm9123 Před 4 lety +3

      5 by my count

    • @joshjoseph1423
      @joshjoseph1423 Před 4 lety +5

      I did count 5 but I lost count after and didn't want to rewatch it lol

    • @nicholashartzler2205
      @nicholashartzler2205 Před 4 lety +35

      Love the bonded neutral and ground bus in the sub panel...

  • @eagdhj
    @eagdhj Před 4 lety +20

    4 years in shool, 10 year as working full time electrician, last year with my own firm.
    this man is very dangerous, to himself and to others, all i have to say

  • @noelwhyte9834
    @noelwhyte9834 Před 4 lety +15

    I'm not arrogant. And I make a mess while working so I can focus solely on what I'm doing. I always clean up afterwards and during if possible.

    • @kenbrown2808
      @kenbrown2808 Před 3 lety +1

      worked for a guy whose motto was "we clean up the jobsite once per phase. either before we start or after we finish."

  • @lpburke86
    @lpburke86 Před 4 lety +643

    Gotta love when the firefighter builds a fire hazard, then calls electricians arrogant....

    • @Urbicide
      @Urbicide Před 4 lety +24

      It is a fairly standard practice, when the origin of a fire can't be exactly determined, to place the blame on "Faulty electrical wiring".

    • @lpburke86
      @lpburke86 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Urbicide yeeeeah.... that hasn't been true for years.

    • @eviscerated5669
      @eviscerated5669 Před 4 lety

      😂👍

    • @hongtanke
      @hongtanke Před 4 lety +9

      They are, 20amps is just fine if the wire gauge is adequate. Standard home wiring can go up to 25 amps before a fire hazard is present. 15 amps is standard as most items in the home don't need much more than that and gives enough wiggle room for shitty builders who used poor wiring or old wiring. A new house can support 20amps all throughout just fine.
      Most kitchen appliances that aren't 220 use 20 amps and most of the time if you convert an outlet on an old house to support a microwave you would just put in a 20 amp breaker and be fine. It's code in most areas as well.
      stop fear mongering.

    • @JYNXZI_SZN
      @JYNXZI_SZN Před 4 lety

      I would have to dale disagree with u and go with what the guy with the long passage said

  • @vansgardens2304
    @vansgardens2304 Před 4 lety +109

    If you don’t want to hire a licensed electrician, at least read up the importance of keeping your neutral and ground isolated from each other after your main panel.

    • @JKiler1
      @JKiler1 Před 2 lety +3

      This was the first major mistake I saw in his work. I kept waiting for him to bring it up as something NOT to do.

    • @StandAgainstTheGlobalists
      @StandAgainstTheGlobalists Před 2 lety +2

      It’s an extra precaution. It’s really not a big deal. All ends up in the same place anyway.

    • @vansgardens2304
      @vansgardens2304 Před 2 lety +8

      @@StandAgainstTheGlobalists if you’ve seen the charred remains of a ground wire that tried to carry the entire load of a sub panel after it lost a neutral, you’d think it’s a big deal.

  • @Tonay88
    @Tonay88 Před 4 lety +21

    I'm an electrician in Australia and the unlicensed work worries me so much. The unearthed metal conduit is a big no no.

  • @urethrapapercut7409
    @urethrapapercut7409 Před 4 lety +25

    That's 12-2 my friend. Romex through pipe. Neutral and ground bonded in sub. Boxes aren't bonded. There's a reason we're arrogant.
    At least you hooked your outlets instead of using the stabs on the back I guess.

    • @benwidmer8863
      @benwidmer8863 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah but he didnt pigtail his joints

    • @dustindelbommmer9021
      @dustindelbommmer9021 Před 3 lety +5

      He also didn't tape around his screws before Putting them in a metal box.

    • @bruceb3786
      @bruceb3786 Před 3 lety

      @ Urethra Papercut (omg), he even put those little curved thingies around the screw in the correct direction ..... I am impressed.......

  • @dacodester
    @dacodester Před 4 lety +173

    You should do a follow up video fixing all the code violations and explain the safety reasons behind them.

    • @nathancole9823
      @nathancole9823 Před 4 lety +3

      Thank you

    • @brucehackney2217
      @brucehackney2217 Před 4 lety +11

      He isn’t qualified to install electrical work, much less able to explain it!! What a fool!! Yet electricians cost too much!!

    • @patrykslom
      @patrykslom Před 4 lety +5

      That I would be interested in because then maybe I would learn something. The rambling comments have not taught me much.

    • @pecker556
      @pecker556 Před 4 lety

      @@brucehackney2217 but but but!..."electricity is simple stuff!"

    • @gamingandvloging1117
      @gamingandvloging1117 Před 4 lety +1

      I’m an apprentice but that is awful

  • @jasrenfro9856
    @jasrenfro9856 Před 4 lety +825

    How many disappointed electricians watched this?

    • @nickm9123
      @nickm9123 Před 4 lety +18

      too many.

    • @adrianb990
      @adrianb990 Před 4 lety +32

      Ill come down and fix it for 1500 easy.

    • @edrader
      @edrader Před 4 lety +23

      I've reported him to the building department for not pulling a permit :-)

    • @17kelvinator
      @17kelvinator Před 4 lety +33

      Watching this makes me feel like maybe all of his other videos are full of garbage that I don’t know about just because I’m not in that industry... maybe that’s why all the loggers are always freaking out!!!

    • @beeps7
      @beeps7 Před 4 lety +9

      @@edrader He's pretty much reported himself. I'm sure there are inspectors in his area that have seen his handy work.

  • @OldMockingbird
    @OldMockingbird Před 4 lety +43

    The coupling with the 6 inch piece, that hurt my eyes 😐

    • @benwidmer8863
      @benwidmer8863 Před 3 lety +1

      I'm glad I'm not the only one who saw that

    • @johnsalcido5436
      @johnsalcido5436 Před 3 lety

      Then don’t watch....... wtf is the problem?? He’s obviously not a damn electrician and hell I don’t blame him

    • @owenharmon2919
      @owenharmon2919 Před 3 lety +2

      @@johnsalcido5436 youre right hes not an electrician. Hes a moron with no clue how the trade works

    • @fedfreds832
      @fedfreds832 Před 3 lety

      My journey men told me one day to get a foot long piece of pipe and not what my girl means😂😂it didn’t make sense but was funny but now it makes sense

    • @mcs-21277
      @mcs-21277 Před 3 lety

      @@owenharmon2919 sloppy work

  • @Procodilee
    @Procodilee Před 4 lety +20

    This video made my head hurt and the fact that you were a superintendent screams nepotism because you surely aren’t electrically inclined how could you run an entire job not knowing if they did their job right

  • @fishonshawn4327
    @fishonshawn4327 Před 4 lety +156

    Dude you didn't run THHN nor did you ground your boxes! This izs why they don't let General Contractors Superintendents touch Electrical.

    • @isdmac1214
      @isdmac1214 Před 4 lety +12

      Next video, he does brain surgery, those doctors are very very arrogant.

    • @beeps7
      @beeps7 Před 4 lety +3

      @Mario The box itself needs to be grounded, attached to the ground wire via a green bonding screw. Over time emt set screws loosen and can open the "grounded" path creating a dangerous situation.

    • @alexdownard1948
      @alexdownard1948 Před 4 lety

      The emt is grounding the box and if you put lock rings on the correct way the do not come loose.

    • @beeps7
      @beeps7 Před 4 lety +5

      @@alexdownard1948 Beg to differ. As temperature changes metal shrinks and contacts making the set screws lose over the years. A separate grounding wire is the best way to go.

    • @alexdownard1948
      @alexdownard1948 Před 4 lety

      Ok bud

  • @theycallmebacon5692
    @theycallmebacon5692 Před 4 lety +114

    I'm not an electrician nor am I a rocket surgeon. But shouldn't those metal boxes be bonded with the ground wire?

    • @totallyjonesin
      @totallyjonesin Před 4 lety +1

      No. The panel should be grounded though.

    • @theycallmebacon5692
      @theycallmebacon5692 Před 4 lety +8

      Like I said I'm not an electrician, I probably would have bonded it with the ground wire anyway. But then again I'm the guy that grounded his propane water heater

    • @willagresham2978
      @willagresham2978 Před 4 lety +10

      Pretty sure the main is bonded and grounded any sub panel will not be bonded. All metal boxes should be grounded.

    • @theycallmebacon5692
      @theycallmebacon5692 Před 4 lety +3

      @@mdvener my water heater actually doesn't have electricity running to it. When I first got the place,, the water was hot in more ways than one. They had a water line running through the vertical knock outs in the breaker box. I re plumbed, and rewired the house. The house was something scary movies were made of.

    • @warrenmichael918
      @warrenmichael918 Před 4 lety +1

      if he would have grounded the boxes, the return through the neutral back to source is also returning through the bare ground and if he grounded the boxes, it is now live with return power isnt it ? LOL get a hold of that with sweaty hands and hang on for the ride !!

  • @nickcardone133
    @nickcardone133 Před 4 lety +38

    Thank you for creating fire hazards and leading others to do the same Mr. Know-it-all. Our code book is written by the National Fire Protection Agency for a reason. Not one of your better videos here.

    • @walnutcove8583
      @walnutcove8583 Před 2 lety

      Can you point out the fire hazards?

    • @stew-03
      @stew-03 Před 2 lety

      @@walnutcove8583he didnt seperate the grounds from the neutral in the sub fed panel

    • @walnutcove8583
      @walnutcove8583 Před 2 lety

      @@stew-03 not a fire hazard. Potential shock hazard, but not fire hazard.

  • @miitch99
    @miitch99 Před 4 lety +14

    "Superintendent." Aren't they the arrogant ones? Think they know how to do other people's jobs just because they think by watching so many professionals work that they can do it themselves?

  • @mitchellkesterson1905
    @mitchellkesterson1905 Před 4 lety +65

    Cody, I love your videos but you should leave electrical work to an electrician. There are quite a few mistakes in your work here

    • @Therealphantomzero
      @Therealphantomzero Před 4 lety

      What were the mistakes, for this non electrician?

    • @philllindauer5006
      @philllindauer5006 Před 4 lety

      How about offering some pointers instead of pointing out the mistakes and making the you should hire an electrician comment.

    • @mitchellkesterson1905
      @mitchellkesterson1905 Před 4 lety +9

      I'm not here to teach people how to do my job, nor am I the one putting a step by step video up of how to do something (incorrectly). Most of the mistakes I noticed were techniques he probably saw done when he was in the trades but are no longer up to code and for good reason. If you are looking for a how to video look for one made by an electrician. I've come to expect a little bit more than this from Cody, but if you really want a pointer Phill, hire an electrician.

    • @electricianz24
      @electricianz24 Před 4 lety +5

      Electrical is not a hobby hire a professional

  • @mikegribben4549
    @mikegribben4549 Před 4 lety +252

    Wow! dude, hire an electrician. You know enough to be dangerous.

    • @mrpanda2655
      @mrpanda2655 Před 4 lety +7

      Little knowledge is a dangerous thing

  • @loveahusky
    @loveahusky Před 4 lety +18

    Classic line: “You get what you pay for.” Enough said. From a 3rd year apprentice...Amen.

    • @NeoAH90
      @NeoAH90 Před 4 lety

      Only some times...

    • @hornetd
      @hornetd Před 4 lety +1

      Quality can be seen in the purchase of oats. If you want nice clean fresh outs you must pay a fair price. If you can be content with oats that have already been through the horse you can pay slightly less.

  • @rayhanquesada6147
    @rayhanquesada6147 Před 4 lety +14

    So much for grounding 😂. Love the 12/3 you used 😂😂 that panel looked the same from when you first got to it

  • @mattk1358
    @mattk1358 Před 4 lety +285

    Seems nice he can post a video and 50 electricians tell him every code violation before the inspector shows up :) Instead of paying for electrical work I should just post some youtube videos and get all the advice for free!

    • @justinturnsvirtual
      @justinturnsvirtual Před 4 lety +32

      well if your gonna post an instructional video you should know what you are talking about first

    • @Steven0sborne
      @Steven0sborne Před 4 lety +28

      If you think he actually pulled a permit for this job youre crazy. He mentions a permit but that final product would fail inspection for at least 6 different reasons.

    • @johncware66
      @johncware66 Před 4 lety +16

      @@Steven0sborne i wouldn't assume that. I pulled permits for a studs-up kitchen remodel, redid all the wiring. The inspector came for electrical sign off, wiggled one box, and said "You wired this yourself? And you are going to live here?" I agreed, and he said "OK" and signed off. This was in CA. Permits are mainly for increasing your tax basis on property, and generating revenue for the city so far as I could tell.

    • @JustinHefley
      @JustinHefley Před 4 lety

      That is a form of Cunningham's law.

    • @sqike001ton
      @sqike001ton Před 4 lety +4

      And this is why I build in a permit free zone bow I know there are laws ypur supposed to follow but they dont actualy have anyone on the books to inforce them

  • @mr4x4s
    @mr4x4s Před 4 lety +166

    I’m a licensed electrician, and I’m not arrogant! We probably seem arrogant because people like you think you know enough to do electrical work yourself. If you would like, I could list each of your several NEC electrical code violations, and point out the short comings in your work in this video. Electricians spend as much time obtaining a journeyman’s license as a college student spends getting a degree, but people complain when they have to pay to have something done right..... thanks for your support 🙄...

    • @rickstretz296
      @rickstretz296 Před 4 lety +14

      Exactly! and thank you! I did a 6 year apprenticeship... 2 years residential, and 4 commercial and Industrial. I cringed watching this video, but even more at the arrogance cody showed in his blanket condemnation of most highly trained craftsman on any job! 42 years later and I was and am still learning! Again, Thank you! Rick

    • @carbonfusion
      @carbonfusion Před 4 lety +4

      I'm not an electrician, but I would love to hear what is wrong with this setup? I think it is the same in my outbuilding that my dad built... Am I missing something?

    • @Belg1970
      @Belg1970 Před 4 lety +4

      @@carbonfusion Yes you are missing something, but as an electrician I'm not stupid enough to tell you how to do it and get sued when it goes wrong for you. If your so inclined several of the things he did wrong are listed in different comments.

    • @danjason2167
      @danjason2167 Před 4 lety +4

      Greetings from and English electrician. 3-4 year apprenticeship and the amount of people who think they know better because they have done it in their house and it's fine is incredible, with their "it hasn't burnt down" yet attitudes.

    • @scottt8813
      @scottt8813 Před 4 lety

      mr4x4s preach on brother

  • @farmerdave7965
    @farmerdave7965 Před 4 lety +21

    Yup. Another of those "electricians don't need to know anything. Anyone can do electrical work" videos.
    Let me see you bend box offsets in that conduit.

    • @johnfrantz1086
      @johnfrantz1086 Před 3 lety +4

      I've worked for the local school district as an electrician for 15 years, even the licensed guys screw up. They cost a lot, even the bad ones for a reason. With that being said, it's possible Wranglestar might have had potential to be an apprentice candidate......not now!!! 30+ years in the trade and not "arrogant" .....confident. Keeping people and property is serious business. There is an NEC for a reason..... Guys and videos like this!

    • @fedfreds832
      @fedfreds832 Před 3 lety +2

      @@johnfrantz1086 but what he’s saying is your pipe coming out of the box is straight there is o offset. When you actually look at your pipe work it’s trash. It’s nice for pulling cause all straights 😂but looks terrible

    • @desertoutlaw3317
      @desertoutlaw3317 Před 2 lety

      didn’t even strap the emt to the wall lmaoo

  • @Hoss-mv9hn
    @Hoss-mv9hn Před 4 lety +6

    I love when a layman says electricians are arrogant, he just cant comprehend what we're explaining.

  • @BENABONZO
    @BENABONZO Před 4 lety +129

    Imagine calling other people arrogant while literally risking your life butchering their trade skills because you refuse to let someone else do the job.

    • @TheMuel18
      @TheMuel18 Před 4 lety +3

      Oh come on, where exactly is the danger? Is this code? No but is it actually likely to cause issues? Also no

    • @frankjones43
      @frankjones43 Před 4 lety

      Sam Hall code exists for a reason

  • @Fred_Bender
    @Fred_Bender Před 4 lety +43

    As an electrician having an "attitude" can help save your life. Other people are always telling you what to do.I usually tune them out so I don't make a serious mistake.

    • @knurlgnar24
      @knurlgnar24 Před 4 lety

      You are an arrogant electrician. Listening to people who criticize your work may be what saves your life.

    • @andrewb9940
      @andrewb9940 Před 4 lety +7

      Customer - do you need to shut off our power today to wire that?
      Electrician - yup, or I die
      CZcams commenters - ARROGANT EleCtRiCiaNS

    • @martinmeza6291
      @martinmeza6291 Před 4 lety

      knurlgnar24 when people criticize a trade they know nothing about and try to tell you how to do your job which you go to school for and practice over thousands of hours it’s better not to listen because they know not what they are talking about electricity isn’t as simple and if you don’t have a general understanding of it it’s better to let someone who does and has the training for it do the job because it will be done professionally ,right, and safe

    • @knurlgnar24
      @knurlgnar24 Před 4 lety +2

      @@martinmeza6291 Absolutely incorrect. Dogma and political protection is a powerful combination in the trades that causes overconfidence among those ordained by the authorities to practice their craft without competition. I experience this in my line of work as well. People go to school for religious studies for thousands of hours too and think they are next to God, but yet they often know little of merit on the subject next to laypeople. If a studied person doesn't respect the perspectives of laypeople around them they have no business practicing their craft and do great harm to those in the craft who are the true masters of said craft.

  • @SofaKingSkilled
    @SofaKingSkilled Před 4 lety +75

    If it weren’t for Beer, Electricians would rule the World...

    • @johnsalcido5436
      @johnsalcido5436 Před 3 lety +3

      Dude I don’t think so..... Sure electricians have become basically the more important trade to be in but it’s definitely not the most important industry or workforce type.

  • @seditiouslibel
    @seditiouslibel Před 3 lety +25

    ELECTRICAL CODE BOOK 101:
    I have been in the electrical industry since 1978. From taking coffee orders as an apprentice to laying out decks on midtown Manhattan hi-rises. I take offense to being classified as "arrogant" by anyone that has mastered nothing. I have always policed my work area as do most tradesman. I would respectfully request you pull down this video outlining the performance of an electrical installation without prefacing this video first with credentials, licensing and a waiver for safety. You may be a superintendent of a job-site........but it ends there. If you were just out to impress the youtube audience with your knowledge on an electrical install....you blew it. Stick with time sheets wranglestar.

    • @michaelleddy3701
      @michaelleddy3701 Před 2 lety

      Which shops have you been with in the 5 boroughs?

    • @gharm9129
      @gharm9129 Před 2 lety

      lmao that boomer @seditiouslibel is the literal definition of arrogant XD

  • @KL7EN
    @KL7EN Před 4 lety +15

    All the electricians I ever worked with were very nice and helpful. They had no problem sharing information or discussing how electricity works or the proper work to wire.

  • @offroadtek00
    @offroadtek00 Před 4 lety +44

    I cringe whenever I see receptacles daisy chained that way.

    • @qv6486
      @qv6486 Před 4 lety +5

      agreed. I would not daisy chain outlets like this.
      Daisy chaining will work as far as delivering power but its not something i would do.
      Get some wire nuts use the right pig tail connections.

    • @jellybean7253
      @jellybean7253 Před 4 lety

      I'm curious as to why? Thanks

    • @offroadtek00
      @offroadtek00 Před 4 lety +9

      @@jellybean7253 Between the two screws on the side of the receptacle is a little stamped metal link. It is so you can separate the two outlets in case you wanted to switch one side with a lightswitch and the other stay hot. The link is stamped and bent so you can easily remove it. When you chain receptacles like Cody did that little metal link is now a "Current carrying conductor". Every bit of current for the downstream receptacle will now flow through those links. They are not rated as a "CCC" so it is against code to daisy chain like that. It could overheat due to high current flowing through it. If the neutral side link were to break it could create a situation where the black and white wires on all the downstream outlets would be Hot. That could lead to plugging in a tool and it's case being energized or other issues. The "what could happen by daisy chaining" is a rabbit hole that doesn't end well. The proper way to install a receptacle is a 6" black, white and grounding pigtail from each outlet bonded in the box to the incoming wire.

    • @davidp8563
      @davidp8563 Před 4 lety +1

      @@offroadtek00 You are mostly correct but I believe the scenario you describe would only occur on a network circuit....2 hots/1 neutral. If you loose the neutral you bet 240.

    • @offroadtek00
      @offroadtek00 Před 4 lety

      @@davidp8563 It will happen with any voltage. When the neutral wire is broken and there is a load plugged in, all the neutrals that are disconnected from the panel will have voltage on them.
      An exercise you can do to see it in action is take a 12v automobile light bulb with 2 leads. Only connect the positive lead to the car battery and test the voltage between the negative lead and the battery post. 12v!

  • @Preacher_Henrry
    @Preacher_Henrry Před 4 lety +35

    He installed Neutrals and grounds together at the sub panel and that’s the biggest code violation here

  • @Vandel212
    @Vandel212 Před 4 lety +4

    I think his electric work videos are my favorite. The comments section is the best on them.

  • @AppalachianLife
    @AppalachianLife Před 4 lety +18

    My local inspector will not approve romex run in conduit. We have to use individual wires. Inspector said romex gets too hot in conduit.

    • @nicholasbrassard3512
      @nicholasbrassard3512 Před 4 lety +1

      It does indeed

    • @tylermoss9398
      @tylermoss9398 Před 4 lety

      Yes it does!

    • @renegonzalez2809
      @renegonzalez2809 Před 4 lety +3

      That's why he's not an electrician

    • @xhacks519
      @xhacks519 Před 4 lety

      Romex in conduit is only allowed to protect wire from elements and physical damage up to a max of 10 ft per nec 2017

    • @gogamog
      @gogamog Před 4 lety

      @@xhacks519 what is your code reference that limits this to 10 feet?

  • @dillonmckenzie7494
    @dillonmckenzie7494 Před 4 lety +186

    As an electrician I almost had a stroke while watching this lol

    • @adamgibby5701
      @adamgibby5701 Před 4 lety +5

      Me as well..I subscribed then unsubscribe as soon as he started stereotyping.

    • @markcoleman8349
      @markcoleman8349 Před 4 lety +8

      I just realized the wasn’t the greatest once he said 12/2 was 12/3. THE GROUND DOESNT COUNT

    • @cuzz63
      @cuzz63 Před 4 lety +4

      You had a stroke from arrogance.

    • @RepublicOfCatyes
      @RepublicOfCatyes Před 4 lety +1

      @@markcoleman8349 12/3 has four wires in it... basic, right?

    • @markcoleman8349
      @markcoleman8349 Před 4 lety +3

      RepublicOfCatyes 12/3 has 3 current carrying wires. A hot a neutral and a traveler. The ground is a wire and is in there but it isn’t included in the name associated with the cable. This man just called 12/2 12/3 which just gave me a brain aneurism

  • @dominicalphamale6293
    @dominicalphamale6293 Před 4 lety +27

    9:12. Electricity is simple…when you don’t know what the hell you’re doing

  • @cntrygrlTawanna
    @cntrygrlTawanna Před 4 lety +4

    As an electrician there is a list of things I could comment on that are inncorrect. However, I will only say one, 12/3 is not what you were working with.

  • @reidhamar2930
    @reidhamar2930 Před 4 lety +104

    Who else noticed the cable jacket and wire insulation on the floor behind Cody at the end. Shame shame 😂

    • @wranglerstar
      @wranglerstar  Před 4 lety +29

      Haha, it's rubbing off on me,

    • @paulwalton3637
      @paulwalton3637 Před 4 lety +1

      🤣🤣 great observation skills

    • @finieclimber
      @finieclimber Před 4 lety +1

      I was thinking the same. The irony of listening to the story and seeing that. Spec in the eye and all that though.

    • @johncware66
      @johncware66 Před 4 lety +1

      @@wranglerstar you are a pro now!
      :)

    • @fsmoura
      @fsmoura Před 4 lety +3

      I'm calling his homestead right now and telling him that if he expects his like & subscribe any time soon, he'd better send someone to clean up that mess!

  • @MrMadeinthe80s
    @MrMadeinthe80s Před 4 lety +151

    The inner OCD electrician in me is going crazy lol, but hey it works.

    • @justinturnsvirtual
      @justinturnsvirtual Před 4 lety +9

      I know the cringe is real

    • @benzmansl65amg
      @benzmansl65amg Před 4 lety

      Why? It looked good to me...

    • @CB-nn1kx
      @CB-nn1kx Před 4 lety +21

      benzmansl65amg
      Offsets were not put into the conduits where it enters the boxes, the conduit should be touching the wall. None of the conduit is supported to the wall with conduit straps. The screws on the conduit connectors are facing the wrong direction. He should have used a wire-nut instead of that crimp, generally solid wire can’t be crimped. But like the other guy said it works, and it’s a lot better than some of the other journeyman’s work I’ve seen😂

    • @Js-dm3cm
      @Js-dm3cm Před 4 lety +5

      Bare ground in the EMT is driving me nuts. I would him had rather left the sheath on.

    • @Js-dm3cm
      @Js-dm3cm Před 4 lety +4

      Also no ground screws...

  • @armandoestrada5663
    @armandoestrada5663 Před 3 lety +6

    Bet your clients were shocked when they found out you werent an electrician

  • @MrWayneploof
    @MrWayneploof Před 4 lety +4

    ALL I GOT TO SAY IS WOW DON'T DO IT LIKE THIS GUY

  • @Telliewren
    @Telliewren Před 4 lety +117

    A $1,000 may seem like a lot to pay a qualified electrician, but a burnt down building is a few dollars more.

    • @guytech7310
      @guytech7310 Před 4 lety

      I am sure he pulling down at least $150K from CZcams.

    • @stophate2023
      @stophate2023 Před 4 lety +3

      If you charge a thousand to do what he did then you are a rip off. His DYI project is sufficient enough. It's not rocket science.

    • @electricianz24
      @electricianz24 Před 4 lety

      Could not agree more

    • @pecker556
      @pecker556 Před 4 lety +1

      @@stophate2023 Im a rip off.

    • @NeoAH90
      @NeoAH90 Před 4 lety

      Well, at least this work in the video cost like $200 to so be expensive if you charge $1000 for this job well you're a thief it's simply.

  • @allensutton5390
    @allensutton5390 Před 4 lety +52

    Love your lifestyle, BUT a good example of why we have Electricians.

    • @mattjames8683
      @mattjames8683 Před 4 lety

      Explain please. What is wrong with the work? Genuinely curious here ....

    • @justinturnsvirtual
      @justinturnsvirtual Před 4 lety

      hahaha i love this comment XD

    • @justinturnsvirtual
      @justinturnsvirtual Před 4 lety +2

      @@mattjames8683 wrong type of cable should be t90 or other applicable types, not sure what you are using the plugs for but 20amp circuits for plugs shouldn't have 6 outlets, grounds should be bonded to the boxes, conduit has no metal straps on them, neutral and ground buss's in the sub panel should be isolated until the main distribution panel. (metallic pipes often don't require running grounds through them they act as a ground themselves)

    • @mattjames8683
      @mattjames8683 Před 4 lety +2

      @@justinturnsvirtual And that is why your hire an electrician! Ha ha ha thanks for the info!

    • @justinturnsvirtual
      @justinturnsvirtual Před 4 lety

      @@mattjames8683 hahah no worries knowledge is power ;)

  • @jcgelec
    @jcgelec Před 4 lety +5

    Knock out, connectors, and the wire is 12 2, you dont count the ground wire.

  • @divisiononesocial3249
    @divisiononesocial3249 Před 4 lety +2

    I’m a 15 year Electrician, that romex inside conduit and making up the plugs with the hot first is some bulll 🗣💡

  • @CB-nn1kx
    @CB-nn1kx Před 4 lety +19

    Man Cody, you opened up a can of worms with this video😂😂

  • @brianzeh7719
    @brianzeh7719 Před 4 lety +25

    Its actually called a 12/2. You dont count the ground wire because it is not a current carrying conductor.

    • @CraigEngbrecht
      @CraigEngbrecht Před 4 lety +4

      Atleast it is designed not to unless there's a problem. :P

    • @justinturnsvirtual
      @justinturnsvirtual Před 4 lety +2

      actually the count is referencing insulated conductors ;)

  • @JohnSullivan-pg3ys
    @JohnSullivan-pg3ys Před 4 lety +2

    12/3 would be size 12 wire and 3 current carrying conductors so there would be red white and black along with the ground, 12/2 is the cable ur using rn

  • @ThePiones
    @ThePiones Před 4 lety +38

    I always had the suspicion he was stupid. Now I'm sure

  • @TheMasonator777
    @TheMasonator777 Před 4 lety +28

    Not an electrician, but I would say in many cases the answer is, “Don’t confuse a respect for the deadliness of electricity for arrogance.”
    Electricity is no joke. Once you see a badly shocked/burned person (I have), or someone get electrocuted, you’d never let politeness get in the way of what you know to be true.

    • @andip8495
      @andip8495 Před 2 lety

      amen. seen to many mistakes cause injury

  • @Enlightn76
    @Enlightn76 Před 4 lety +26

    Some may people confuse my insistence on quality and safe work with arrogance.
    However having witnessed 2 electrocutions first hand in my 24 years in the profession, and coming in behind people who didn't have enough knowledge to understand what they were doing, I occasionally get testy. I do insist my
    guys keep a clean and orderly work area, but I've seen plenty who don't.
    Electricity can be very dangerous and it's really quite sobering to watch the life being pulled out of somebody by an invisible energy force.
    Did I mention it also hurts like hell the entire time it's killing you?

    • @russruss624
      @russruss624 Před 4 lety +2

      Amen. I'm testy right now!! Downright salty and sandy at the same time.

  • @anthonyesparsen7776
    @anthonyesparsen7776 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Your sub panel feeders are to be a minimum of 60 amp rating per 225.39 for outside branch circuits and you must have grounding electrode system for your building and bond your metal structure per 250.50,2550.52

  • @SzilardPusztafalvi
    @SzilardPusztafalvi Před 4 lety +2

    Few things. Before that I used to be an electrical technician in Hungary, I live in the US for 14 years. It is a reason why I don’t do electrical work too often here. I would start with like with guns when you show 4 time they are empty I would turn off the breaker and lock it and disconnect and short the incoming cables wearing 2 gloves. Of course I put a shut off switch first so if I work on the box or something on fire I can turn it off faster without thinking. I would wire all boxes separately so if one brake it is not effecting the rest. Separate breakers optional. Write everything with flexible wiring connect them outside the receptacle so if one burns down it not spread. Use better quality receptacles too easier faster and more secure to connect to them. Of course I ground all box and the lid. And I would connect the 2 phase with a relay so in case of 1 dropping out it is not demanding the connected motor. Of course I would have indicator lights so I see it is on and I have all the phases working from a distance. Label what is what too. I think everything else is ok...

  • @alexgreenman2289
    @alexgreenman2289 Před 4 lety +12

    Just came across this video, I'm from the UK and our code of practice is to sleeve the cpc (circuit protective conductor) and to earth the back box is a must. We also test our work to verify compliance with regulation allowances. If you are going to post your work online for everyone to see and comment, make sure it's correct. I know I'm from a different country but by the looks of the other comments, I'm not alone on this one.

    • @johnfrantz1086
      @johnfrantz1086 Před 3 lety

      See even in the UK you are way off base. PLEASE STOP MAKING ELECTRICAL VIDEOS!!! I'm terrified to think your kids might be in the area of this fire and safety hazard.

  • @BAGOTCORNER
    @BAGOTCORNER Před 4 lety +11

    I’ve seen tradesmen of every type not clean up .
    Personally I do because my work reflects on me as a private contractor .
    As far as arrogance , that is something that is often times confused with a non willingness to compromise .
    I personally take your safety very seriously .
    When I get “ can we just “ or “ can you do this to just get me by “. That answer is most often an unwavering no.

    • @knurlgnar24
      @knurlgnar24 Před 4 lety +3

      You don't take safety seriously, you take your pride seriously. Stop being so arrogant. Listening to criticism can only make you wiser as no one is right all of the time.

    • @BAGOTCORNER
      @BAGOTCORNER Před 4 lety +4

      knurlgnar24 settle down .

  • @theexplorer7139
    @theexplorer7139 Před 4 lety +2

    Don't blame the trade, blame the individual. And for the record, I met lots of managers and supervisors that were arrogant and even clueless of what they're doing.

  • @Phil-vo2rj
    @Phil-vo2rj Před 3 lety +6

    ok answered my question "cheapest and easiest way" thats pretty telling

  • @alessandrolorenzo4051
    @alessandrolorenzo4051 Před 4 lety +114

    Don’t do what this guy did.
    Idea is there but do not use this guys video as a tutorial, its an unsafe install
    - Licensed Electrician
    And we always clean up after ourselves
    We’re not plumbers 😂😜

    • @AtilaSic89
      @AtilaSic89 Před 4 lety +2

      im learning for journeyman electrician in serbia and ive never seen daisy chained so many plugins.. even metal casings for EVERYTHING... also do you folks not use RCD's for gnd/neutral control? because he obviously had connected gnd to neutral.. and that utility butchering through the
      insulation of cables... omg.

    • @QoraxAudio
      @QoraxAudio Před 4 lety +3

      Is it normal to connect neutral to ground in America?
      In Europe we have a separate ground rail for ground.
      It's connected to a metal rod embedded in the actual ground/earth/soil.
      Neutral often floats around >10 volts instead of being dead zero.
      Funny thing is, European connectors are symmetrical, meaning the neutral and phase can be swapped around by re-plugging, sometimes it causes phase and noise issues in older tube electronics.

    • @spudatbattleaxe
      @spudatbattleaxe Před 4 lety +4

      Da Qoraxxx ground and neutrals are bonded in the main service disconnect, any sub panels or disconnects after that they must be separate. This is a pretty big violation in this video

    • @QoraxAudio
      @QoraxAudio Před 4 lety

      @@spudatbattleaxe Why are those connected in the main panel?

    • @AtilaSic89
      @AtilaSic89 Před 4 lety +2

      @@spudatbattleaxe In serbia there is illegal practice applied in old housings called nulling - connecting neutral to gnd because old housings do not have propper gnd wires. and it prevents the use of rcd in main fuse panel... sad but true

  • @robbob4872
    @robbob4872 Před 4 lety +106

    you were a superintendent? lol, that's a scary thought...

    • @cceeii24
      @cceeii24 Před 4 lety +1

      Parking lot superintendent...

  • @andrewt9204
    @andrewt9204 Před 4 lety +4

    Oof, even as a diy guy I noticed some mistakes and nomenclature errors. I know this is a small project, but before I wired my unfinished basement, I had the gumption to read an up to date Black and Decker home wiring book. I know it's probably not perfect, but I felt it was well enough to be safe. It passed inspection easily enough anyhow. I only missed a couple nail plates.

  • @lumo2981
    @lumo2981 Před 4 lety +3

    No saddles on that conduit legit killed me, no earth sleeving also 😵

  • @michaelsa892
    @michaelsa892 Před 4 lety +109

    I’m not arrogant I just know a lot. The wire you had was 12/2 12 being the size of wire and 2 being the number of current carrying conductors the bare/grounds not counted

    • @wranglerstar
      @wranglerstar  Před 4 lety +15

      Got it, my bad,

    • @ShawnZiemba
      @ShawnZiemba Před 4 lety +1

      @@cheeseburger9232 That's what I thought too, but would like to know if anyone can confirm since I am adding some conduit to my garage.

    • @wobblysauce
      @wobblysauce Před 4 lety

      Could have placed some insulation behind the wall. If you are going to fix it might as well fix it well.

    • @michaelsa892
      @michaelsa892 Před 4 lety +7

      No you are not supposed to put romex in conduit.

    • @christopherdraper8671
      @christopherdraper8671 Před 4 lety +2

      @@cheeseburger9232 normally you dont if you run nomex just staple it to the wall. Had a few years running wire just trying to figure out why he didn't ground out to the box?

  • @p8ntballer117
    @p8ntballer117 Před 4 lety +71

    " I cant afford a profeesional" *drops $2500 on e bike

    • @justinscott3001
      @justinscott3001 Před 4 lety +2

      He got the e bikes for free though

    • @p8ntballer117
      @p8ntballer117 Před 4 lety +3

      @@justinscott3001 ohhhh

    • @thelyingscotsman7993
      @thelyingscotsman7993 Před 4 lety +3

      @@p8ntballer117 He still makes good money from You Tube .

    • @anikidwolfy
      @anikidwolfy Před 4 lety +1

      @Gary Russ no gary, you would need to charge as to teach that getting a pro in in the first place is cheaper than getting a pro in to unfk his handy work,

    • @bruceb3786
      @bruceb3786 Před 3 lety

      @ Max Banono, That's the reason he can't afford a "professional"

  • @jpabmx
    @jpabmx Před 4 lety +2

    Hey, I think you were implying that the wire in your hand was a 12-3, that's actually 12-2 wire.

  • @johnsteed5894
    @johnsteed5894 Před 4 lety +52

    Non-Electrician: does the job completely wrong.
    Then: “doesn’t it feel good when it’s done right?”
    Lololol!

    • @donzmilky5961
      @donzmilky5961 Před 4 lety +6

      Im only on week 4 in trade school and im amazed at how shitty of a job he did and how certain he is that he did the right thing.

    • @jamess.829
      @jamess.829 Před 4 lety +5

      John, I laughed at some of his rookie mistakes. Most people who think electricity is easy only know enough to be dangerous.

    • @bruceb3786
      @bruceb3786 Před 3 lety

      he's still waiting for that day........

  • @darenvitaelectrical5310
    @darenvitaelectrical5310 Před 4 lety +8

    As an English electrician I’d say what a bloody mess that was ,liked the comment about not needing many tools ,not a test meter in sight 😱 that’s why an electrician charges what he does as thousands of pounds worth of training and tools are needed to carry out the job expertly and safely

  • @darrensmith5544
    @darrensmith5544 Před 4 lety +36

    Unfknblvbl!! This guy is a danger to himself AND others!! DO NOT do what this guy says..... Superintendent of what??! Christ! I'd hate to see his jobs.........

    • @TheMuel18
      @TheMuel18 Před 4 lety

      Explain exactly what you expect to go wrong.

    • @TheMuel18
      @TheMuel18 Před 4 lety

      @Joe Crow Yes, we do, however not all things that exist outside of that book, which varies by local, is fire and danger and death itself.
      Believe me, I deal with residential and commercial code daily. A lot of stuff doesn't meet code and nobody ever notices or cares. The rules are very general and sometimes they don't work or don't matter in certain contexts.
      It's not a black and white affair

  • @EFD620G
    @EFD620G Před 4 lety +2

    You should have this work inspected for insurance purposes, but be prepared for a redo!!

  • @heroknaderi
    @heroknaderi Před 4 lety +2

    Wow great information ℹ️ I appreciate it. I’ve seen unlicensed electricians bypass safety. I enjoyed watching your video 👍 I’m curious how many amps is supplying your shop.🤩

  • @toddsellman9081
    @toddsellman9081 Před 4 lety +147

    Wow, you're calling electricians arrogant? Maybe you should look in the mirror once.

  • @VegaChastain
    @VegaChastain Před 4 lety +3

    hello, great video, but let me give you a little conscructive critiscism:) first thing is that for this application you bought the wrong wire, this wire is for running in houses, ect, but for your purpose you should have gotton the individual wires in the spools, black, white, and ground. The reason being is that when running sheathed cable like this through conduit can get to hot, (sheathing of individual wire plus cable sheathing plus conduit) and can cause problems. you could still buy this cable but just strip the entire outer jacket and use individual wires. also the cable that you are using is 12/2 not 12/3, 12/3 wire would have a black, red, white, and ground wire, the number does not include the ground. also, the metal boxes need to be grounded, there is a special threaded hole in them just for it, buy a pack of small green "ground screws" and pigtail the ground wire and connect it to the box. also, tighten all conduit connections BEFORE you run or connect wires, much easier and after recepticles are in it is hard to tighten conduit locknut. other than that the conduit install looks nice, one tool you could buy is a conduit bender, save money on connections and you can do box offsets to make it look nicer. also you should have gone ahead and gotton gfci's as they are required by code and are much safer. hope this helps:)

  • @luckieboy4891
    @luckieboy4891 Před 4 lety +2

    btw, 12/2 is the romex you used. not 12/3. you dont include the ground.

  • @kamiskenaw4340
    @kamiskenaw4340 Před 2 lety +1

    I couldn't stop staring at that coupling so close to the box. I would've been chewed out for that.

  • @SoftTinyBunny
    @SoftTinyBunny Před 4 lety +3

    GFCI over current required along with a grounded sub panel (ground rod) and tamper resistant devices. NM Cable is permitted to be in a raceway for stubs only BECAUSE OF THE INSULATION RATING. I stayed in a holiday and expressed last night.

  • @Gunner1750
    @Gunner1750 Před 4 lety +42

    It seems like it has been a long time since you have been around electricians. Back in the 90's when I broke in a lot of Electrical contractors wouldn't clean up their mess because the GC didn't want to pay them too. They wanted to cut bids down so they would take out clean up with the agreement that the GC would. I always cleaned up after myself or made it as easy as I could on the one that followed me. It's just the right thing to do. Now back to your work. You probably won't kill anyone with it. Well we all hope not anyway. But you are definitely going to make the next guy behind you shake his head and ask WTF? Pretty crappy for a guy talking smack about the trade he is trying to replace. Keep the great moments in building science coming LOL.

    • @donzmilky5961
      @donzmilky5961 Před 4 lety +2

      The next guy im sure will be pretty pissed off seeing a hot neutral wire and no grounding.

  • @PrisonMike-_-
    @PrisonMike-_- Před 4 lety +5

    "12/3" ....pulls out 12/2

  • @zacharybuchanan1587
    @zacharybuchanan1587 Před 4 lety +5

    I like your videos. But this one is rough.
    Everybody is an electrician, until we're called to fix all your mistakes. Cheaper to hire us the first go around and do it right from the start.

  • @russellpoulin2161
    @russellpoulin2161 Před 4 lety +56

    there's one word for this guy (HACK)

  • @guyjones4936
    @guyjones4936 Před 4 lety +4

    I retired from commercial electrical work 13 years ago. Cody, do yourself a favor, spend some money and buy a NEC code book and follow it. I do not agree with some of the codes in there but for the most part, they are sound and having a copy and reading might save a life some day, or at least a ton of money. You do neat work, but Romex in conduit is a no-no, Bond all metal boxes to ground and keep your grounds and neutral wires separate once you leave your main service.

    • @johnacord5664
      @johnacord5664 Před 2 lety

      I have wondered about running the Romex in the conduit. I simply thought he was wasting his money.

  • @michaelguppy4518
    @michaelguppy4518 Před 4 lety +4

    Please for the love of God no one use this guy as a tutorial. There was so much wrong info and Code violations.

  • @anthonyesparsen7776
    @anthonyesparsen7776 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I always wire to the minimum code requirements per each building installation residential or commercial

  • @socmonki
    @socmonki Před 4 lety +9

    Please separate your ground and neutrals! only bond Neutral at the transformer (which will be done by your POCO). You may have problems with breakers not tripping with your subpanel set up like that. and that could be a very bad time!
    Many of us are arrogant, but its usually the really arrogant ones who don't actually know anything. The ones of us that do are open to learning and owning up to our mistakes. and we clean up after ourselves as well. we go to school (either college, or a recognized apprenticeship) for many years to become a Journeyman. We take pride in our work. You are an intelligent man, and I have confidence that you would seek help if you needed it. This is a simple job, and with a little guidence (ground and neutral not bonded!) you can handle it. Most people can't. Even some electricians can't, such as with a buddy of mine and his uncle. My buddy buys a house, and it has an old fuse box and no ground in it. His uncle says "we can just run a ground wire from the plug and tie it to the neutral!" and I had to step in and tell my buddy to NOT bootleg the ground. Don't have to run all new wire, but to be compliant with code he'll need GFCI receptacles with the proper labelling to let people know there is no equipment ground.
    but please, fix that neutral/ground problem! and please ground your boxes, and wrap a little tape around your receptacles to guard against shorts. :)

    • @elcam84
      @elcam84 Před 4 lety

      Bonding is done at the first disconnect which is usually your main panel but codes in many states now require a a disconnect before your main panel so bonding is done there now.

  • @josephboyd5440
    @josephboyd5440 Před 4 lety +21

    You have 12-2 wire, 2 conductors and a ground

  • @KingTesticus
    @KingTesticus Před 4 lety +1

    It's your fire.
    It isn't arrogance to us. We call it skilled professional. Hacks may confuse that with arrogance...

  • @hammerman7777
    @hammerman7777 Před 3 lety +1

    Everyone that isn't an electrician thinks electrical is easy...That is why we charge so much to fix your messes. Kings of the trades.

  • @timelmore2
    @timelmore2 Před 4 lety +4

    Posting electrical, plumbing, or welding is a sure-fire way to boost interaction in your videos.

  • @lilhojo123
    @lilhojo123 Před 4 lety +11

    with those type of receptacles you can just leave the wire straight and put in not around the screw because the screw actually screws a plate in on the inside to hold the wires. you dont want to do that with are the ones that just use a spring to hold the wire in. Also that's 12/2 wire. don't count the ground.

    • @davidp8563
      @davidp8563 Před 4 lety +1

      @Dewey Rayburn The receptacles he used were commercial grade receptacles with plates under the screws to allow for straight in termination. The pressure from the grooved plate combined with the pressure from the screw is far better than putting a hook under a screw head. The stab back receptacles used in residential work ARE junk. They rely on spring pressure to secure the conductor in the device. The devices Cody used were NOT stab back receptacles. He should have used the pressure plates instead of the hook.

  • @TheAndy331
    @TheAndy331 Před 4 lety +2

    "Don't mean to hurt any feelings " drops the hammer !!

  • @edwin6172
    @edwin6172 Před 4 lety +8

    When he said “when it feels good to do something right.” Lmfaoooooooooo