electricalperson
Senior Member
- Location
- massachusetts
i found an old knob and tube feed that was twisted but was never taped or soldered probably been like that for 80 years. didnt have any signs of burning
UL doesn't say you 'have' to strip the conductor insulation before using the wirenut, right?:roll:
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the instructions on the bag say we have to strip. 110.3B says we have to follow what the UL listing is. the instructions is what the UL listing of the wirenuts are based off of. i dont think wirenuts are ment to be current carriers just to hold the splice together. we did work for some guy that didnt strip any of the wires and put wirenuts and the fixture and it worked. but the current was traveling through the spring of the wirenut
There are some folks on here that believe that the manufacturer's instructions are more of a "guide" rather than the rule. They also feel that UL does not require instructions to list the product....(For the record, I do NOT share those opinions.
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i found an old knob and tube feed that was twisted but was never taped or soldered probably been like that for 80 years. didnt have any signs of burning
13 pages of posts on twist or no twist...I could not bring myself to read all 13 pages..just say no to pretwist it is a wasted step and teach proper wire nut usage. like make sure all your wires are even before appling wire nut and 9.9 times out of 10 it will work perfectly.. you can never get perfect except????????????????????? :grin:
FWIW I believe that any instructions in the listing of labeling have to been followed. I would consider the labeling to be anything ON the product or in the published listing... JMO
13 pages of posts on twist or no twist...I could not bring myself to read all 13 pages..just say no to pretwist it is a wasted step and teach proper wire nut usage. like make sure all your wires are even before appling wire nut and 9.9 times out of 10 it will work perfectly.. you can never get perfect except????????????????????? :grin:
I dunno. Accepting a 1% failure rate on something so basic and simple seems a tad high. If 1% of all wire-nut splices fail, I can see the fire department being called to every job done with wire nuts.
yeah pretwisting makes it really hard for the guy coming after you....with all those wires twisted so badly.where a properly installed wirenut does twist the wires but not nearly so excessively.
I dunno. Accepting a 1% failure rate on something so basic and simple seems a tad high. If 1% of all wire-nut splices fail, I can see the fire department being called to every job done with wire nuts.
ahh but nothing is perfect if one out of a hundred fail it is normally due to some operator failure. like twisting so tight it breaks the wire off. or connecting a stranded to a nuetral. I was at our new facility today abd in the new break room and 3 outlets for the microwaves did not work and neither did the pizza oven. new installation contractor still there nuetral twisted out of wire nut on one, it happens especially in a hurry.
I once saw a Ford driven into a drunk, so I agree.This is akin to saying you saw a drunk drive their Ford into a bridge, therefore Fords are unsafe.
As far as the blue boxes.....I use them all the time, so maybe I'm a hack.:smile:
I feel better now.
steve
yeah pretwisting makes it really hard for the guy coming after you....with all those wires twisted so badly.where a properly installed wirenut does twist the wires but not nearly so excessively.
this one still going......![]()
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yup and you and I are part of the problem :grin: