Discuss MICC Terminating in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

The last bit of MI I messed up was when working in the dark, I some how mixed up the g/y sleeving with one of the black sleeves, no idea how, the conductors don't look or even feel the same. Conductor belled out ok for identifying, R1+R2 ok, insulation not so ok. Started panicking slightly as each cable tested fine after sealing. Proper embarrassing when I found it. :flushed:

I'm surprised more people don't have the tools! I have the full set of metric and most imperial tools as well. Don't get to use them as much as I'd like. :cry:
 
We did MICC forty years ago for domestic garages. I remember being shown how to do it. All the while I was at once marvelling at this new thing I was being shown and in disbelief as to it working. I just couldn't fathom how the wires would not short out. Of course we meggered it but still it quite impressed me. To answer your question @Pete999 this is something I only ever did on site in the real world never in college, not even a mention of it except for the fireproof bit about the really high temperatures it could withstand.
 
Are we the only country to have used micc in the past

It was first manufactured in France; we licensed it from the French company. However, the UK and USA have always been more into earthed metalclad construction while Europe tended to favour all-insulated materials, so it probably found a bigger market share here than there.
 
The biggest use I have seen was for fire resistant circuits, but it used to be the dog's proverbials for industrial system. Looked magnificent when polished up, but sometimes issues with volt drop as folk looked at the current limit (for a given CSA) and forgot that was down to high insulation temperature and not magic low resistance copper...
 
We used to do loads of boiler houses in the stuff in the 70's and 80's. A lot of changes were being made for energy saving purposes and the 'optimiser' controllers were the in thing. They were generally incorporated in panels of various sizes. A lot of local authority work in schools, libraries and a massive fire station...pumps, valves and stats all over the place and two underground trench/tunnels linking buildings.

On occasions, one fault with pyro was feeding 3 phase motors due to induction problems. Had to fit capacitors across the phases at the motor connections. On one job the wrong ones were supplied and four 3 cores blew, with the caps blown to bits.
Oh for an iphone for some job photos then.
 

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