Hi, my name is Fabrizio Jimenez and I intern at Becton with Mr. Caputo, the Buildings and Ground Supervisor. I am interested in HVAC and (Heating Ventilation Air Conditioning) and Electrical. Through Mr Caputo, I learned about the building's layout for the heating and cooling systems and how to wire an entire house!
Monday, June 4, 2018
House Project: Part 20
Here you can see the final product of the house. We placed cover plates on all of the boxes and receptacles. You can also see that my mentor has placed the breaker switches at the bottom of the house. In the second picture, you can see we powered the panel which provided power to the entire house.
Being able to work with Mr. Caputo and his staff was an amazing experience! When I began this internship, I never thought I would be able to complete a project like this!
House Project: Part 19
We are almost finished here! All of the boxes are wired and everything is in place for the most part. The only thing missing is the breaker panel that my mentor will be helping me with.
House Project: Part 18
The only thing left at this point are the receptacles and the bottom panel. You can see that the top receptacles are hanging because I had just finished wiring all of them. We are missing a couple in the kitchen because those are GFI receptacles. A GFI is a ground fault circuit interrupter, its only used anywhere where water is used. It made so that if water was to make its way into the receptacle it would kill the rest of the circuit so no one would get electrocuted.
House Project: Part 17
All of the lights have been finished. You can see some orange wire nuts at the top of the house. We had to change some of the wire nuts out because when we put in the receptacles, they were not going to fit in the metal boxes.
House Project: Part 16
Right here I have all of the lights and light switches wired and done. If you look closely, you can see that I wrapped all of the exposed wire nuts with electrical tape. My mentor explained that if the exposed wire nuts touch the metal box it would kill the circuit.
House Project: Part 15
Now that all of the wires are in the boxes, my mentor showed me how to wire the lights and the light switches. You can see in the pictures that some of the lights and light switches are hanging off the house. My mentor told me not to screw them in because in a real life job, there will always be a rough inspection to make sure the lights and light switches were done to code.
House Project: Part 14
These pictures are from behind the house. We had a couple of rooms where we couldn't just run one circuit per room. We had to make a third box to run from the rooms and tie them together. Then we could run that box back to the panel so it could provide power to the rooms. You can see in the first two pictures that we tied the grounds, hots, and neutrals all together.
House Project: Part 13
At this point, we completed almost all of the wiring. We just finished screwing in the boxes and tying together the ground cables. All the yellow nuts you see in this picture are the grounds being tied together.
House Project: Part 12
My mentor and I decided to use metal boxes for the house. Therefore, we had to ground every single box with a ground wire because that is part of the New Jersey electrical code. Every green wire on the house board is a ground wire.
House Project: Part 11
Now that all of the boxes have been wired to the panel, I secured all of the boxes with half inch screws.
House Project: Part 10
Here you can see I finished wiring all of the boxes. They all are wired from their own box to the electrical panel on the bottom right. The panel will be able to provide power to everywhere in the house.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)