alilooki.blogg.se

Weatherproof splice box burry
Weatherproof splice box burry







weatherproof splice box burry
  1. #Weatherproof splice box burry update
  2. #Weatherproof splice box burry manual
  3. #Weatherproof splice box burry full

I am in Canada and I believe the major update to the National Building Code (electrical) adopted provincewide in my area happened in the mid 1970's.

#Weatherproof splice box burry manual

I suspect this lighting was put in originally in the 1960's, and then updated about 1982, when the garage door was converted from manual to motorized. I can find walkway lamps and retrofit recessed potlights with integrated boxes, but nothing for outdoors.

weatherproof splice box burry

I'd like to replace with a bulkhead light with an integral junction box, if such a thing exists. So that's the wire (and not too much of it) I have to work with, sans junction box. I cannot access the wire from the inside without complete disassembly of the garage door, ceiling, and some considerable cement, not to mention a natural gas pipe running nearby! Similar to this:ĭirectly behind the siding where the wire extends out is a joist, part of a double joist lintel over the garage. It had a single light bulb component in one side and room for wiring (in integrated junction box) in the other. The original light was a very old"bulkhead" or "nautical" style of weatherproof design. It would also be aesthetically not very pleasing to have a light perched on the external box, weatherproof or not.Īre there any exterior lights where the splice box is integrated into the light fixture itself? Certainly none where I can mount a flush box nor one where I can perch a fixture on a weatherproof outdoor junction box. I have no alternative mounting locations. Way back when the solution to an over-the garage light was to run a shielded wire through a 1/2" drilled hole in the lintel/cedar shingle. The fixture is attached directly to cedar shingles which are themselves attached to the lintel above the garage door. Of course that flushness comes from being located on a structural building component with no junction box behind it.

weatherproof splice box burry

It seems counter-intuitive to have a solution that is more exposed to the elements (and hockey balls) than something that looks to have been installed mid-1960's. It would be less weatherproof then the current (broken) arrangement. It will get soaked, constantly, whereas now, being flush it is semi-protected. If I put an external box not integrated into the light fixture itself, I will have so much protrusion the light fixture would extend well beyond the drip line of the wall above the lintel. I traced the circuit to a junction box in a wall outlet.Īny solutions? Are there still available external lighting with a built-in junction box? I went to a couple of Big Box stores here in Canada but could find no solutions. The light is part of a circuit that extends up the wall to the room above. There is a ground and it was fully accessible, as easy as 2 screws to change the lightbulb. Looking at the old light, it is the type that was a a junction box in itself. I am stuck with that wire coming out at that location and nowhere to put a junction box in, certainly not recessed. There is no non-structural support nearby, the rest being concrete.

weatherproof splice box burry

I need to replace that light and thought to put in a junction box per Code, but the shielded wire is passed through the supporting lintel, which is structural. It looks well done and has apparently been like that for decades, but the light case broke when a hockey ball hit it (kids!). The wire comes straight out of the wall (w/ground). I took off the light to find no junction box. It was an incandescent bulb system, pretty typical.

#Weatherproof splice box burry full

With over 30 years of experience offering advanced network solutions-including our revolutionary gel sealing technology-CommScope can help your network realize its full potential today and tomorrow.An outdoor, marine-style light used over my garage driveway in a 50+ year house needs replacing. By knowing where in the outside plant FTTx network you’re building, finding an easy-to-deploy and long-lasting closure becomes effortless with CommScope’s proven (yet future focused) fiber closure family. Distribution and drop network solutionsįor example, as you move closer to the customer, frequent re-entry access is essential-whereas, in the trunk network, a fit-and-forget solution is often the preferred option.Feeder and distribution network solutions.To choose the right fiber splicing closure, you must determine which solution best suits your needs in the specific part of the network: To tackle the variety of challenges service operators face when deploying fiber, CommScope has created a family of fiber optic splice closures that balance key criteria such as reliability, installability, flexibility and speed of deployment.









Weatherproof splice box burry