this post was submitted on 07 Jan 2025
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I think this is what I said also, yes
I completely agree. IMO 15A convenience circuits (normal wall circuits in residential homes) are out of date and shouldn't be used any longer. 20A should be the minimum, but that extra copper is expensive, so it's a balance that has to be weighed at construction.
No, I don't think that's what this is. The fact is that the NEC is for building design, not for building use. The whole reason that there's a breaker installed that has to be matched to the correct gauge wires and the correct outlets, or whatever, is so that when the occupant does something dumb it trips long before you get enough heat to start a fire.
The NEC is not for the occupant, it's for the architects, general contractors, and electricians. Unless you're doing construction in your house you don't need to worry about it at all.
Use your breakers to their capacity, but understand that the closer you get to their rating the more likely you'll pop a breaker, or worst case start a fire if your stuff wasn't installed well.
But you don't have to derate your own stuff per NEC requirements, that's not how it works.