- Oct 30, 2022
- 12
- Pool Size
- 15000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-20
Brief history: The junction box for my pool light was not up to code when I bought the house 2 years ago. Specifically, the box was at water level, and water was actually dripping from the j-box. I've had the breaker to the light turned off since I moved in, and recently decided to fix it up.
The easy part was adding 8 inches of galvanized pipe to both the pool light conduit as well as the supply side conduit from the breaker panel.
I was able to push some of the extra wire on the light housing (fortunately there was plenty of slack back there) into the conduit behind the niche, and also pull it out of the conduit at the j-box. Pushing and pulling a few times gave me the 10 inches of slack I need to accommodate the new 8 inches of conduit. I'm well aware that splicing that wire would not be up to code and also not a good idea for my health, so fortunately there was enough slack to not have to install a whole new housing.
My problem is that there is not enough slack in the wires between the breaker and the j-box to pull 10 inches through. In fact there is zero slack. So my choices are either 1) splice the supply wire at the j-box or 2) pull all new un-spliced wires through that conduit. #2 is probably doable with lots of lube, but still a PITA.
Which brings me to my question. Is it within code to have a splice in the supply wire? The breaker/j-box conduit is not flooded like the j-box/light conduit so water ingress/shorts should not be an issue. And as I look at the wires running in the breaker/j-box conduit they are not encased in a rubber sheath either, whereas the wires in the j-box/light conduit are encased in a sheath to protect against water exposure.
Thanks!
The easy part was adding 8 inches of galvanized pipe to both the pool light conduit as well as the supply side conduit from the breaker panel.
I was able to push some of the extra wire on the light housing (fortunately there was plenty of slack back there) into the conduit behind the niche, and also pull it out of the conduit at the j-box. Pushing and pulling a few times gave me the 10 inches of slack I need to accommodate the new 8 inches of conduit. I'm well aware that splicing that wire would not be up to code and also not a good idea for my health, so fortunately there was enough slack to not have to install a whole new housing.
My problem is that there is not enough slack in the wires between the breaker and the j-box to pull 10 inches through. In fact there is zero slack. So my choices are either 1) splice the supply wire at the j-box or 2) pull all new un-spliced wires through that conduit. #2 is probably doable with lots of lube, but still a PITA.
Which brings me to my question. Is it within code to have a splice in the supply wire? The breaker/j-box conduit is not flooded like the j-box/light conduit so water ingress/shorts should not be an issue. And as I look at the wires running in the breaker/j-box conduit they are not encased in a rubber sheath either, whereas the wires in the j-box/light conduit are encased in a sheath to protect against water exposure.
Thanks!