Electrical – Is it legal to use different wire types for pig-tails

code-complianceelectrical

When wiring an indoor switch, receptacle or fixture that has NM-B run into the box, is it legal to use a different type of wire (for example THHN) of the appropriate gauge to make pig-tails?

I can't imagine that this would not be legal, since one would connect NM-B to THHN in a box when transitioning from an interior run in cable to an exterior run in conduit, but just wanted to be sure.

If so, is it critical that the colors match, since, for example, it would be obvious by tracing the wire within the box that a short piece of white sheathed "neutral" wire was connected between a black "hot" wire exiting the box and the terminal on a standard toggle switch. Would putting some appropriate colored electrical tape on the wire be sufficient to remark the wire to be of the appropriate color?

Best Answer

It's OK to mix types of wire.

There are no exceptions to the color-coding or re-identifying rules for pigtails. For example you could not use a green wire for pigtails with the hot or a black wire for a neutral pigtail. What's clear to you today when you do it may not be clear to the next person looking at the wires folded up in the box.

If you were to re-identify a pigtail by taping the insulation end to end, it's pretty hard to imagine anyone complaining about that, even if it's not strictly compliant.