OK before you bite my head off for the question; just remember I am an engineer, not an electrician and need your know-how.
Woke up this morning to a cold shower, burr. Checked the breaker, found it opened. Closed it, sparks flew, heard thud in hot water closet in a few feet away. Opened hot water closet could smell the bad news of something burnt. Had wife throw breaker in while I looked and listened for the fault. Smoke and fire flew from the junction box on wall.
OK so far an easy find. Opened the 4-inch junctione box and found the wire nut insulation burned up and touching the metal junction box. So far so good. Ok here is my dilemma on how to fix.
From the breaker panel it is wired with stranded #8 AL NM sheath 2-wire with ground. From the water heater it is wired with solid #10 CU NM sheath 2-wire with ground. What is the best way to splice a stranded #8 AL to solid #10 CU? The AL is much softer and about all I can make it do is wrap around the solid copper #10. I have the wire nuts made for Al/Cu but what technique do you guys suggest?
Woke up this morning to a cold shower, burr. Checked the breaker, found it opened. Closed it, sparks flew, heard thud in hot water closet in a few feet away. Opened hot water closet could smell the bad news of something burnt. Had wife throw breaker in while I looked and listened for the fault. Smoke and fire flew from the junction box on wall.
OK so far an easy find. Opened the 4-inch junctione box and found the wire nut insulation burned up and touching the metal junction box. So far so good. Ok here is my dilemma on how to fix.
From the breaker panel it is wired with stranded #8 AL NM sheath 2-wire with ground. From the water heater it is wired with solid #10 CU NM sheath 2-wire with ground. What is the best way to splice a stranded #8 AL to solid #10 CU? The AL is much softer and about all I can make it do is wrap around the solid copper #10. I have the wire nuts made for Al/Cu but what technique do you guys suggest?