Using floor outlets is a good idea. There are special boxes with cover plates made for this use. I would recommend you place them next to the couch instead of under it. (Between the couch and end tables.)
A bathroom counter usually has a 4-inch backsplash, where the counter surface turns up the wall. Backsplashes prevent water from running behind a countertop. An electrical outlet receptacle is usually placed 2 to 3 inches above the top of the backsplash. The outlets can be placed horizontally or vertically.
The National Electrical Code, or NEC, states that the following areas of homes are required to have GFCI outlets: All 15 amp, 20 amp and 125 volt outlets in bathrooms.
The minimum requirement for outlet receptacles in a bathroom is one GFCI-protected receptacle served by a 20-amp circuit. This is a bare minimum, however, and most bathrooms will have at least two receptacles, and often as many of four or five.
Appliances. Electrical outlets mostly are used for countertop appliances, so often the easiest way to hide an outlet is to keep a sleek device placed in front of it, with the cable carefully twist-tied and tucked away. Beside a vanity.
The minimum requirement for outlet receptacles in a bathroom is one GFCI-protected receptacle served by a 20-amp circuit. This is a bare minimum, however, and most bathrooms will have at least two receptacles, and often as many of four or five. When considering bathroom receptacles, keep correct placement in mind.
The National Electrical Code, or NEC, has specific GFCI requirements for dwelling units. Article 210.8 states that ground-fault circuit-interrupters shall be used for all 125-volt, single-phase, 15- and 20-amp receptacles installed in the following locations: Bathrooms: All receptacles must be GFCI protected.
Since this one has more, it means it is part of a "series". A "series" means there are 2 or more outlets powered by the same wiring and circuit. The other set of black and white wires goes to the next outlet down the line and that's how it gets its power.
Because if a cord or wire were to fall down on a partially plugged in right-side up outlet you would short out between the hot and the neutral. When the outlet is "upside down" in the above situation the wire would touch ground first.
Anyway, the first subject is a bit touchy because it makes it difficult to perform an inspection when all of the wires coming into the panel are 12 but many of the circuits have 14 in them too. There is nothing against code mixing wire size for these circuits as long as the OCPD matches the smallest wire.
A little hard to read, but the left side says "hot wire" and the right side says "white wire". We'll put the black wires on the hot side and the white wires on the left side. First connect the ground wire to the green screw at the bottom of the outlet. Wrap it around the screw and the tighten to lock the wire in place.
One rule of thumb is to assign a maximum draw of 1.5 amps to each receptacle, which allows for 10 receptacles on a 20-amp circuit.
Typically, you can have no more than eight lights or electrical outlets on a 15-amp circuit. To determine the amp rating of a circuit, just look at the number on its breaker or fuse in your main electrical panel.
Yes you may use No. 14 AWG Cu wire for outlets but the Circuit Breaker to protect the circuit should be only 15A. Do not use 20A Circuit Breaker for this circuit. Also, use only 15A receptacles.
A standard GFCI will protect up to 20 amps, drawn from any combination of receptacles, either the built-in one or any number of additional ones connected to its load terminals.
Generally, homes have eight to 10 outlets on a 15 amp breaker but not all are used at the same time. Lights and outlets are normally wired on separate branch circuits, which means that the lights will be protected by a separate circuit breaker to the one which protects the outlets.
My short answer to the question is that “Yes, lights and power outlets (a.k.a AC receptacles) can be on the same circuit controlled by a circuit breaker, especially in a single family residential house”.
14–2 wire is allowed for a 15 Amp circuit, and at 120 Volts, 15 Amps x 120 volts = 1800 volt-amperes. So that would allow ten (10) receptacles, you would probably derate that to eight (8) for an 80% safety factor.
A receptacle outlet must be installed in every kitchen, family room, dining room, living room, sunroom, parlor, library, den, bedroom, recreation room, and similar room or area so that no point along the wall space is more than 6 feet, measured horizontally along the floor line, from a receptacle outlet [210.52(A)] (
NEC 210–52 Generally, receptacle outlets in habitable rooms shall be installed so that no point along the floor line (measured horizontally) in any wall space is more than 6 feet from an outlet in that space. An outlet shall be installed in each wall space 2 feet or more in width.
For a 20 amp, you _must_ use 12 gauge to start with, 14 gauge doesn't handle a 20 amp fuse at all. A 12 gauge wire is typically good for 15 amp at 100 feet. For your 160 feet, they suggest a 6 gauge.
If your question is “can I connect a receptacle rated for 20 amps to a circuit designed for 15 amps?”, the answer is yes, because the receptacle can handle more current than the circuit is rated for. If you exceed 15 amps, the breaker will blow, and protect the receptacle. The inverse is not true.
Electrical receptacles have two pairs of terminals so that you can daisy-chain multiple receptacles on a single circuit in an existing house. Standard electric code allows you to wire 15-amp receptacles with 14-gauge wire, but it's safer to use 12-gauge, which is thicker.
The National Electrical Code requires floor outlets to be a part of an approved assembly consisting of a metal box, gasket seal, special receptacle and strong cover plate with a moisture-proof cover. You can't just mount a regular wall outlet in the floor.
The National Electrical Code specifies that you must have an electrical outlet (receptacle) within 6 feet of the corner of any wall and no more than 12 feet separating receptacles on the same wall (6/12 outlet rule). That of course is the minimum requirement for living space .