The leading cause of fire in the Philippines is faulty electrical wiring. We have 2000 fires each year in the capital alone. For example our substandard outlets made for at most 15A were protected by 30A breakers so the breaker can't protect the wires.
https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/new...trical-wiring-cause-most-ncr-fires-bfp/story/
Also it came to my attention that many contractors and electricians use inferior unlisted lugs where there are only few contacts points between the surface of it and the bus bar (that is, either the locally made bus bar or lugs were not flat). For example they drill additional hole and didn't sandpaper the bottom resulting in inducted few contact points. My electrician has bought 5 pcs of such himself. So let me take the opportunity to thoroughly understand its behavior. Supposed the bus bar and lugs have few contact points only like the following:
Consider the red bits as only 0.5 millimeter contact points between bus bar and chair lugs where there are only very few (say 0.8% compared to the surface area). At a small amperage, the few contact points would heat up. Let's say it crosses certain ampere and heating threshold where the contact points are on the merge of melting. Would it just melt? If it does, would the bus bar and chair lugs reposition themselves so there is more even contacts? (assuming the chair lugs goes down by gravity). Or would arc form between the gap and destroying other parts of the surface?
I couldn't find details of this in google and I've wanted to understand the details lately. So what happens in joule heating and melting (and arcing?) in microscopic contact points between bus bar and chair lugs when the surfaces are not evenly in contact? What's the exact step by step progression when they get destroyed (or is there readjustment to equilibrium where there is eventually more contacts as they melt into each other surface)?
This also applied to few contact points between wires in terminals or other loose connection scenario.
I couldn't find details of this in google and I've wanted to understand the details lately. So what happens in joule heating and melting (and arcing?) in microscopic contact points between bus bar and chair lugs when the surfaces are not evenly in contact? What's the exact step by step progression when they get destroyed (or is there readjustment to equilibrium where there is eventually more contacts as they melt into each other surface)?
This also applied to few contact points between wires in terminals or other loose connection scenario.