D

Darkwood

Right ... Just been nudged to set this up by Paul.M and sounds a good idea following recent threads I've done in the Arms..

Rules....No Offensive material... edit if required before posting as this is the public arena.
Anything to do with the trade or in and around it ...H&S pic's welcome.

Beware plumbers!!!.jpg

I've posted this a few times and this is at a mates house following a kitchen refirb several yrs ago. :omg_smile:

Beware plumbers!!!.jpg
 
Have to disagree with you there. No copper creep on solid conductors, although they can't carry as much current as stranded ones.
What I mean is, because there's no give, if the flat clamp cage is (partly) on the insulation, there will be very little force on the copper: the cage will be tightly clamped to the insulation. On stranded conductors, because they move about as you tighten the clamp (partly on the insulation), you're more likely to make at least some connection with the copper.

But I agree with you about the creep. :)
 
Yes, the creep is always a problem...Jimmy Saville for one.
Seriously though, I do understand creep in cables, but I was wondering...if a clamp is skewed, so is touching insulation and the copper, is a tight connection that way better then one which is making full connection with the copper but not very tightly?
I would tend to favour the former, as there would maybe be lack of movement, whereas in the latter, you have a bigger area to exploit arcing?
Please, don't hit me! I am genuinely interested to hear your views.
 
Steve, it looks like a storage heater distribution board judging by the 16a MCBs and 2.5mm circuits ? A combination of cheapy board, poor workmanship and a substantial load for several hours a day would certainly cause the problems found.
I think we'd be better off using metal boards to reduce the risk of fire in such cases. Oh hang on a minute.... :D
 
Hi Pirate - the correct mm2 contact area is critical to avoid heating and the pressure from the clamp ensures the contact is maintained over time etc. Without both the result is an unpredictable failure, imho :) .
 
This video montage contains some truly shocking examples of extremely poor 'workmanship' and gross stupidity. As the 'music' in the video is quite atrocious I would recommend that you watch with your speakers turned off.

 

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Green 2 Go Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses Heating 2 Go
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

Advert

Daily, weekly or monthly email

Thread Information

Title
Dodgy trade pictures for your amusement! - 1 Million Views!
Prefix
N/A
Forum
UK Electrical Forum
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
8K
Unsolved
--

Advert

Thread statistics

Created
Darkwood,
Last reply from
vjsmarwick,
Replies
8,090
Views
1,202,680

Advert

Back
Top