John From Detroit
Well-known member
I have used that for a long LONG time. Back in the good old days of 300 baud modems and TAPCIS it was in my tag line file.I love your signature
I have used that for a long LONG time. Back in the good old days of 300 baud modems and TAPCIS it was in my tag line file.I love your signature
While different coloring for 14 and 12 gauge wiring is certainly a good practice, especially in RV construction, there is no requirement for it in the NEC or RVIA specifications.My rv has standard residential romex. White for 14 guage and yellow for 12. Is that standard across all manufacturers? I dont think my last rv did but it has been a while and i cant remember.
It's standard across Romex wire makers, so yes it should carry across to RVs that use Romex-type jacketed wiring. But as Dutch says, there is no requirement in the RVIA or NEC that color-coded Romex be used in RV construction.My rv has standard residential romex. White for 14 guage and yellow for 12. Is that standard across all manufacturers? I dont think my last rv did but it has been a while and i cant remember.
Thanks. I figured as much. That is the kind of thing that having in an enforceable RV building code would help a lot.there is no requirement in the RVIA or NEC that color-coded Romex be used in RV construction.
and enforceable requirements to disclose known issuesEnforceable RV building code....what a novel idea.
While different coloring for 14 and 12 gauge wiring is certainly a good practice, especially in RV construction, there is no requirement for it in the NEC or RVIA specifications.