Receptacle pigtails

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iwire said:
No need to be sorry, you?re entitled to be mistaken. . . . It happens the very method I have come up with to comply with those code sections without using a wire nut I also call a pigtail.;)
And you are entitled to be mistaken with regard to the use of the word "pigtail." ;)

If your other wiring method does not involve an additional piece of wire, if it only strips some insulation away from a half inch or so of the neutral conductor and wraps it around the screw, the word "pigtail" would not apply. How do I know that? Because the tail of the pig sticks out away from its body. ;)
iwire said:
Do you have an official definition of pigtail?
I do. This is from the "McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms":
pigtail [elect] A short, flexible wire, usually stranded or braided, used between a stationary terminal and a terminal having a limited range of motion, as in relay armatures.
A wiring method that puts three wires under a wire cap and runs one to the screw would fit this definition. A wiring method that loops a wire around a screw would not. And you have to believe what that dictionary says, because it is really big and heavy, so it must be right. :)
 
charlie b said:
And you have to believe what that dictionary says, because it is really big and heavy, so it must be right. :)
So that means nobody will ever again doubt anything I say??? Cool! :grin:
 
charlie b said:
I do. This is from the "McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms":

Well....what can I say, I am impressed, you do have one. :cool:

There it is, I would never make a good attorney because I ask questions that I do not already know the answer of. :grin:
 
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