I'm looking to set up my 120G and will be running two dedicated circuits in order to be able to provide for critical equipment redundancy.
Right now my plan is run two 20A GFCI receptacles in a double gang box. I figure the easiest way to make this happen is run a single 12/3 NM wire, creating a multiwire branch circuit (shared neutral). After some research, it looks like a I need to run a 2 pole breaker in order to be within code (or two single pole breakers connected out of phase with a disconnect tie bar). The GFCI receptacles will be wired for single location protection only with nothing on the load side and pigtailed neutrals.
With this setup, in the event one circuit trips for whatever reason, I effectively shut down both circuits. This seems to me like I've given back some of the original goal, which is redundancy.
Should I stay with the mulitwire branch configuration or does it make more sense to run two independent circuits with their own dedicated 12/2 and single pole breakers?
I'm not an electrician, but am comfortable doing this myself - I welcome opinions and perspectives, especially from any electrician reefers that may have faced the same issue. Thanks!
Right now my plan is run two 20A GFCI receptacles in a double gang box. I figure the easiest way to make this happen is run a single 12/3 NM wire, creating a multiwire branch circuit (shared neutral). After some research, it looks like a I need to run a 2 pole breaker in order to be within code (or two single pole breakers connected out of phase with a disconnect tie bar). The GFCI receptacles will be wired for single location protection only with nothing on the load side and pigtailed neutrals.
With this setup, in the event one circuit trips for whatever reason, I effectively shut down both circuits. This seems to me like I've given back some of the original goal, which is redundancy.
Should I stay with the mulitwire branch configuration or does it make more sense to run two independent circuits with their own dedicated 12/2 and single pole breakers?
I'm not an electrician, but am comfortable doing this myself - I welcome opinions and perspectives, especially from any electrician reefers that may have faced the same issue. Thanks!