JFletcher
Senior Member
- Location
- Williamsburg, VA
I have several questions about switches and receptacles from I suppose the early 80s until the late 90s... bear with me here:
1) when / why did they get rid of receptacles that could accept number 12 wire as backstabbed?
2) when did the manufacturers get rid of the little pryouts for backstabbing and make them single-use only?
3) I seem to recall that houses in the late 80s and early 90s had plastic yoke switches made by Slater and others that had no EGC connection. Why were these discontinued? Did they lose their listing, or did NEC rules make them obsolete, requiring all switches to have ground connections?
4) was wrapping or putting two wires under one screw on a receptacle ever acceptable by code? Seen a ton of houses wired in the 50s that have what appear to be original wiring and two wires under one screw... How old is 110.3 B?
5) I have recently run across a slew of really odd receptacles, including ones that are backstab only with no side screws, ones with side screws only and no backstabs, and even one that had 12 and 14 gauge strippers built into the ears of the yolk... Who would ever use a receptacle yoke to strip wire? What kind of quirky manufacturing gimmicks have you guys run across with receptacles and switches?
6) I hate to ask this last question, however there seems to be much more disdain for backstab receptacles than with push in connectors (Wago, Ideal,etc.) I'm failing to see the difference between the two... is it the way they are manufactured that makes one good and one awful? Which leads to...
7) if backstabbing is such an awful practice, why do all residential switches and receptacles still have backstab slots, and why does the NEC allow it? Are newer designs better than the old ones?
1) when / why did they get rid of receptacles that could accept number 12 wire as backstabbed?
2) when did the manufacturers get rid of the little pryouts for backstabbing and make them single-use only?
3) I seem to recall that houses in the late 80s and early 90s had plastic yoke switches made by Slater and others that had no EGC connection. Why were these discontinued? Did they lose their listing, or did NEC rules make them obsolete, requiring all switches to have ground connections?
4) was wrapping or putting two wires under one screw on a receptacle ever acceptable by code? Seen a ton of houses wired in the 50s that have what appear to be original wiring and two wires under one screw... How old is 110.3 B?
5) I have recently run across a slew of really odd receptacles, including ones that are backstab only with no side screws, ones with side screws only and no backstabs, and even one that had 12 and 14 gauge strippers built into the ears of the yolk... Who would ever use a receptacle yoke to strip wire? What kind of quirky manufacturing gimmicks have you guys run across with receptacles and switches?
6) I hate to ask this last question, however there seems to be much more disdain for backstab receptacles than with push in connectors (Wago, Ideal,etc.) I'm failing to see the difference between the two... is it the way they are manufactured that makes one good and one awful? Which leads to...
7) if backstabbing is such an awful practice, why do all residential switches and receptacles still have backstab slots, and why does the NEC allow it? Are newer designs better than the old ones?

