Before you flip the breaker, watch this to nail junction-box placement, follow the circuit map, route locking connectors and jumpers cleanly, and verify receiving-card lights for a flawless power-up.
As far as electrical box placement in the playbook, it calls out proposed placement for your electrical junction box. Your junction box can be placed anywhere behind your screen and ideally within rows between the cabinets. That way, when you're tying in power, you have easy access points anywhere between your cabinets. We include plenty of extra length for you to run that cable to your junction box location and attach to your first panel. When it comes to the electrical flow, we've provided a map that calls out the specific circuits and connection points for your electric wiring. So in this case, I've attached our lead wire to the junction box located behind the plywood. I then will route this into my first panel And simply take it and connect it to the locking connector within the cabinet. I'll then route any excess I have here in the cabinet or pull it back through if I have the ability to do that and keep it between the cabinets. So power is now into our first cabinet. I'll then follow my map until my stopping point down the line. In this case, our flow is gonna happen between these two cabinets and attach again here. Power can flow in each direction. So if it makes sense to run power from your right side of the screen to the left, you can do that simply by alternating the routing of the pre attached cables within each cabinet. You can also start power in between cabinets. Again, follow the mapping that we've provided with you, calling out how many panels are to be tied to each circuit that you've installed. Before you tie in power, ensure your power is off. And while you're connecting all the cabinets together, keep that power off during this process. Once you have everything wired up and power is tied to every cabinet, go ahead and turn power on, and what you'll look for is the receiving card to have lights emitting from it. Check all of your cabinets to ensure they're receiving power. If your mapping calls for a jump that is taking power from a cabinet below and going to a different row, then using a jumper is the method that we will make that connection. So down here, I'll connect the cable. I'll route it up into the next cabinet and make our connection point here. I'll then tuck the wire in and maybe utilize a zip tie to keep it clean so it doesn't interfere. If this box is in the way, go ahead and slide that out of the way so it tucks nicely along a path.
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