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Very true. Possibly more skill involved turning an Allen key above your head while holding the conduit inWhat skill is there is cutting and threading pipe though?
Discuss Any conlock converts on here? in the Commercial Electrical Advice area at ElectriciansForums.net
Very true. Possibly more skill involved turning an Allen key above your head while holding the conduit inWhat skill is there is cutting and threading pipe though?
The least of those required. Good conduit skill is all about measurement, bends, sets and doglegs.... installed to a situation requirements.What skill is there is cutting and threading pipe though?
True, I remember failing a practical cos i couldn't make a jumpThe least of those required. Good conduit skill is all about measurement, bends, sets and doglegs.... installed to a situation requirements.
Nothing better than complex conduit installation looking spot on, with as few manufactured bends as possible.
It is yes, but it could all have developed from OUR old domestic 5/8 stuff used early and pre 60's...just folded steel with no chance of physical bending and, as a result, all manufactured fittings with pressure screw fixing. As a system completed, it could have been a real pain to wire with VIR cables.True, I remember failing a practical cos i couldn't make a jump
Mastered it later in my own time and it came in handy
What got my attention here was isn't this conlock similar to the US domestic steel conduit ?
Reply to Any conlock converts on here? in the Commercial Electrical Advice area at ElectriciansForums.net
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