viclibo said:I am pigtailing an entire house using the Ideal # 65 wire nut and want to see if anyone recommends not using the wire nut on the neutral or ground leads. I always do it this way but want some feedback. I do not need info on why not to use this wire nut. Thanks in advance.
Wow! I didn't know they were rated for that many conductors. :wink:viclibo said:I am pigtailing an entire house using the Ideal # 65 wire nut . . .
LarryFine said:Wow! I didn't know they were rated for that many conductors. :wink:
electricmanscott said:What is a #65 wirenut anyway ?
[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]Burned Purple (Ideal #65) Wirenuts found in the field[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]CAUTION: Many electricians, who are not COPALUM certified, recommend other repair methods. While these repair methods are less expensive than COPALUM crimp connectors, we agree with the CPSC that these repairs are considered unacceptable and "does not solve the problem of overheating present in aluminum branch circuits."[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]?Pigtailing with the Purples?[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]The most often suggested unacceptable repair; ("pigtailing") involves attaching a short piece of copper wire to the aluminum wire with a twist-on connector sometimes called a wire nut (IDEAL Purple #65); the copper wire is connected to the switch, wall outlet or other termination device. The Commission staff has evaluated the effectiveness of "pigtailing" as a repair. In CPSC-sponsored laboratory testing, some brands of twist-on connectors have performed very poorly. Accordingly, from what we have seen in the field, we agree with the Commission staff and can validate the laboratory testing in believing that this method of repair does not solve the problem of overheating present in aluminum branch circuits.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]At best we consider the proper application of Purple Wirenuts a temporary repair. However, being that this wirenut is filled with a flammable oxide-inhibitor and the manufacturer has stated that this wirenut is NOT INTENDED FOR A COMPLETE HOME RETROFIT, (http://www.inspect-ny.com/aluminum/i65debat.htm) we believe it is best to leave aluminum wiring alone until such a time as it can be permanently repaired via re-wiring or COPALUM crimping.[/FONT]
Dennis Alwon said:[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]Taken from this site
[/FONT][FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]Burned Purple (Ideal #65) Wirenuts found in the field
CAUTION: Many electricians, who are not COPALUM certified, recommend other repair methods. While these repair methods are less expensive than COPALUM crimp connectors, we agree with the CPSC that these repairs are considered unacceptable and "does not solve the problem of overheating present in aluminum branch circuits."
?Pigtailing with the Purples?
The most often suggested unacceptable repair; ("pigtailing") involves attaching a short piece of copper wire to the aluminum wire with a twist-on connector sometimes called a wire nut (IDEAL Purple #65); the copper wire is connected to the switch, wall outlet or other termination device. The Commission staff has evaluated the effectiveness of "pigtailing" as a repair. In CPSC-sponsored laboratory testing, some brands of twist-on connectors have performed very poorly. Accordingly, from what we have seen in the field, we agree with the Commission staff and can validate the laboratory testing in believing that this method of repair does not solve the problem of overheating present in aluminum branch circuits.
At best we consider the proper application of Purple Wirenuts a temporary repair. However, being that this wirenut is filled with a flammable oxide-inhibitor and the manufacturer has stated that this wirenut is NOT INTENDED FOR A COMPLETE HOME RETROFIT[*1], (http://www.inspect-ny.com/aluminum/i65debat.htm) we believe it is best to leave aluminum wiring alone until such a time as it can be permanently repaired via re-wiring or COPALUM crimping.
[/FONT]
I did not find any other reference to "the manufacturer has stated that this wirenut is NOT INTENDED FOR A COMPLETE HOME RETROFIT" than this statement.9/28/95
At the meeting the manufacturer clarified that while their new twist-on connector has been listed under UL486C, this device is not intended for general aluminum wiring retrofit. The new connector is intended for limited special applications involving (only) certain aluminum-to-copper splices such as the addition of a new device (eg. ceiling fan) to a house wired with aluminum. The manufacturer is reviewing its marketing and instructional literature in order to clarify the intended use.
(both quotes from inspectNY site)3/29/96
Independent Tests indicate Ideal-65 purple Twist-on retrofit connector fails UL 486C Safety Standard despite its UL-listing
iwire said:I think the "we" is a group that has spent a bunch of money becoming COPALUM certified and want to scare up some more business.
celtic said:Who is the "we"?
..and yet, it retains a UL label?
http://www.idealindustries.com/media/pdfs/products/ideal_ul_listed_combinations.pdf (Top of pg. 7)
Seems to me the jury is still out on this....therefore it is allowed.
If I am wrong and there is information more current than 10/20/97 - PLEASE post it.
That may be the case Dennis, but this:Dennis Alwon said:My intent was not to argue the UL but rather to throw out a bit of caution.
....looks like fear mongering to me.[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]Burned Purple (Ideal #65) Wirenuts found in the field[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]CAUTION: Many electricians, who are not COPALUM certified, recommend other repair methods. While these repair methods are less expensive than COPALUM crimp connectors, we agree with the CPSC that these repairs are considered unacceptable and "does not solve the problem of overheating present in aluminum branch circuits."[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]?Pigtailing with the Purples?[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]The most often suggested unacceptable repair; ("pigtailing") involves attaching a short piece of copper wire to the aluminum wire with a twist-on connector sometimes called a wire nut (IDEAL Purple #65); the copper wire is connected to the switch, wall outlet or other termination device. The Commission staff has evaluated the effectiveness of "pigtailing" as a repair. In CPSC-sponsored laboratory testing, some brands of twist-on connectors have performed very poorly. Accordingly, from what we have seen in the field, we agree with the Commission staff and can validate the laboratory testing in believing that this method of repair does not solve the problem of overheating present in aluminum branch circuits.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, Arial, Helvetica]At best we consider the proper application of Purple Wirenuts a temporary repair. However, being that this wirenut is filled with a flammable oxide-inhibitor and the manufacturer has stated that this wirenut is NOT INTENDED FOR A COMPLETE HOME RETROFIT, (http://www.inspect-ny.com/aluminum/i65debat.htm) we believe it is best to leave aluminum wiring alone until such a time as it can be permanently repaired via re-wiring or COPALUM crimping.
[/FONT]
:smile:....we believe it is best to leave aluminum wiring alone until such a time as it can be permanently repaired via re-wiring or COPALUM crimping.
Dennis Alwon said:For use with aluminum & copper wire.
viclibo said:I am pigtailing an entire house using the Ideal # 65 wire nut and want to see if anyone recommends not using the wire nut on the neutral or ground leads. I always do it this way but want some feedback. I do not need info on why not to use this wire nut. Thanks in advance.
benaround said:viclibo, Why not the neutral or ground ?
rabtrfld said:I'm guessing that Neutral & Ground don't connect to device terminals, so they don't need copper pigtails. So The original Al-Al joints can be left alone.
220/221 said:I've seen a lot of AL installations and never a standard wirenut failure on a proper connection.
220/221 said:IMO, purple nuts = sham.
I've seen a lot of AL installations and never a standard wirenut failure on a proper connection.
220/221 said:IMO, purple nuts = sham.
I've seen a lot of AL installations and never a standard wirenut failure on a proper connection.