mesllc
New User
- Location
- New Orleans
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
Is anyone out there using aluminum for circuits 30 amps and over due to the ridiculous cost of copper?
I think there is talk of maybe seeing copper clad aluminum but probably won't ever see straight aluminum in those small sizes again.Maybe they will start making #12 & #10 alum romex again. Back to the 60s
When they offer a payment plan for copper that looks like a car payment, may be time to consider aluminumWhen you have the option of running AL, the price of CU always looks ridiculous. The smallest AL I run is #4.
There were a lot of PIs related to copper-clad aluminum for the 2023 code including some for 10 amp branch circuits using 14 AWG copper-clad aluminum.I think there is talk of maybe seeing copper clad aluminum but probably won't ever see straight aluminum in those small sizes again.
If you could keep the DIY's and handymen from handling it, maybe it would come back. But industry is more interested in making money off GFCI's and AFCI's right now.There were a lot of PIs related to copper-clad aluminum for the 2023 code including some for 10 amp branch circuits using 14 AWG copper-clad aluminum.
As far as not seeing aluminum in 10 and 12AWG, I think you are correct, but really don't understand why.
There was a short period of time around 1974 when new alloy single conductor aluminum was available in 10 and 12 AWG. I worked on an apartment complex where we used it. It was cost effective then, and believe it would be now.
I moved on to running the service truck a couple of years after we had finished that project, and we had no more service calls for the buildings wired with aluminum than we did with others built in the same time frame with copper.
Are you unaware of the myriad problems due to the softness and expansion differences between small aluminum wire and screw terminals on circuits with regular current cycling?As far as not seeing aluminum in 10 and 12AWG, I think you are correct, but really don't understand why.
There was a short period of time around 1974 when new alloy single conductor aluminum was available in 10 and 12 AWG. I worked on an apartment complex where we used it. It was cost effective then, and believe it would be now.
With terminals on devices that are Al/Cu rated it is not an issue. The problem was not with the wire or the devices but with hooking wire to devices unsuited to AL wire.Are you unaware of the myriad problems due to the softness and expansion differences between small aluminum wire and screw terminals on circuits with regular current cycling?![]()
That was the issue with the old aluminum and the old wiring devices. Both were changed to eliminate those problems.Are you unaware of the myriad problems due to the softness and expansion differences between small aluminum wire and screw terminals on circuits with regular current cycling?![]()
Bring back the Corvair!It did not sell well, because of the issues with the old aluminum NM, and few understood the difference that change in the aluminum alloy and the construction of the wiring devices makes for small conductor aluminum applications.
Bring back the Corvair!![]()
I kind of guessing AL/CU devices had less troubles but still had more troubles than copper conductors in general had.With terminals on devices that are Al/Cu rated it is not an issue. The problem was not with the wire or the devices but with hooking wire to devices unsuited to AL wire.