NEC 110.14 says "conductors and terminals more finely stranded than class B or Class C must be identified for the use of finely stranded conductors." Every oven made for residential use comes with a flexible metal conduit that has finely stranded wires in it. These finely stranded wires get mated with the regular Romex wire or regular THHN (which are solid or with standard Class B or C strands) using a regular wire nut (such as Ideal Industries Wing nut, etc). The problem is that the commercially available wire nuts are not listed for use on highly stranded wire (the wire from the oven whip). The inspectors do not seem to be aware of the problem. Am I the only one who sees this problem? Has anyone else come across this issue (and found a practical solution)? Compression lugs (or butt splices) that are designed for highly stranded wires typically cover the large conductors (welding cable for generator, etc). I do not see a compression butt splice listed for #10 or #12 highly stranded wire (as is used with ovens).