steel indenter couplings

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Alot of the installs I see with those fittings seem to be less than tight. I would recommend pulling an egc in that conduit if I were you. ;)
 
Alot of the installs I see with those fittings seem to be less than tight. I would recommend pulling an egc in that conduit if I were you. ;)

I won't say I have never seen them come apart, but seems like anytime Ihave wanted to take one apart it would not cooperate.

Just like you have to remember to tighten a set screw or compression nut, you have to remember to crimp these or they are subject to poor equipment grounding and possibly coming apart.
 
I'm still trying to get my head around the notion that 30 years ago being the 80's.
Like the man said, "If I had known I would live this long I would have taken better care of myself."

the part i find most damaging is remembering how you did something on a job....
and then realizing it was 30 years ago.......

what was ugly, was last night i had posted about doing some work on FPC Boron, CA
and afterwards, googled it....

and found it had been abandoned 10 years ago.... and someone had posted a few hundred
photos on flickr, and among them i found the lift i'd wired and maintained... and it looked
like an abandoned building from 100 years ago.....

http://www.flickr.com/photos/coldwararchaeology/5629885751/in/set-72157626488079836/

it wasn't that long ago... honest....

i'll be back later.. i need to go find my Geritol and walker, if i can remember where i put them.
 
I kept some of the indent fittings from way back, use connectors occasionaly when mounting box to masonary or other solid wall, don't need as big a hole for entry through back of box.
 
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