Lou-Lou Apo said:The only caveat to oversizing the wire is that you are supposed to stay oversized downstream. For example, if you run 12 guage wire, you should use 20amp receptacles, even if you put a 15amp breaker in the box. That is why a 15 amp receptacle doesn't accept 12 gauge wire. In this example, you wouldn't want a future person to open the panel and think that the entire circuit is rated for 20 amps because there is 12g wire at the panel and put in a 20 amp breaker.
Sorry, but that is straight against code. The breaker and receptacles cannot be rated higher than the wire. You can have a 20A (or 15A) breaker with #12 wire and a 15A receptacle. Once you put a 20A receptacle on a 15A circuit (or #14 wire) you are basically stating that circuit can provide 20A at the receptacle - it can't! You can, and should, increase wire gauge to reduce voltage drop on long runs.
Edit for another recent task I did....
I ran a new circuit in buried conduit outside and used parts that I had on hand. I wired up a 20A breaker with 12/2 into a dual gang box and the first termination point was a 15A GFCI. It then feed the next receptacle, a 20A, with the downstream connections. How can I do this? The GFCI although rated for 15A at the receptacle is also rated for 20A pass-through via the back-wired terminals.
One more edit...
Happy 4th Everyone!!! B)