cliffed

-
Arms
wondering what’s being taught in college these days,to the apprentices.
Cause when they come on site,they certainly aint being taught like us seniors were.
Eg stripping of conductors,many use pliers or side cutters,they do not bend conductors over,up to 2.5mm.
Conduit skills to be admired from a distance.
 
I get through thousands of the things, use them on very fine stranded and almost all fine stranded cable. Stock all sizes to 35mm in single, double and uninsulated.
I work through agencies, so unless the company I’m working for supplies them, I’m not going to.
 
The only time I’ve ever known bootlace ferrules to be used, is in BMS panels at a college and in control circuits at a couple of power stations.
Nearly every power station and sub that I've worked at has been ferruled (that word doesn't look right). Not just control circuits but most auxilaries. I know that all the equipment that I install/repair is fitted with a ferule. Apart from looking neater it makes life so much easier when you have to disconnect/reconnect.
 
So every pendant, click rose and every plug you’ve installed, you put crimps on?


Must admit I use them in every thing. plugtops, klix plugs, flex connections in j501s, shortened rcbo fly leads and anything with fine stranded conductors ect ect
upload_2019-2-10_20-39-25.jpeg
 
So every pendant, click rose and every plug you’ve installed, you put crimps on?

In my Instrument Tech days, if I'd got a £ for every fine stranded wire I'd had to re-terminate, I'd be a ...

For the sake of 10 seconds effort ...

Some of us are professionals, some of us amateurs :D:D:D:D
 
I’ve worked in Hospitals, factories, football stadiums, ice rinks, schools, colleges, the O2, railway stations, marshalling yards, offices, hotels, shopping centres, shops, houses, flats, theatres, Police stations, air fields, caravan sites, power stations, data centres, car workshops, resturants and cafes, banks, magistrates courts, leisure centres, swimming pools, the Olympics, street furniture, TV studio, sewage farm, Laboratories, agricultural and horticultural, car parks....
Done power and lighting HV, MV, LV, ELV and reduced voltage distribution, door access controls, CCTV, BMS, trackside signalling, process controls, Fire alarms, PV....

The only time I’ve ever known bootlace ferrules to be used, is in BMS panels at a college and in control circuits at a couple of power stations.

I do some work with mobile motorsport hospitality units (ie artic trailers kitted out). The fixed wiring is always in flex.
We always use ferrels, and most I've come across the installer has used them.

I now use them whenever I use flex by habit now.

I have a lad working for me at the moment, and he had never been told to use them in his training, but agrees with me they make a much better connection.
 
I have a lad working for me at the moment, and he had never been told to use them in his training, but agrees with me they make a much better connection.

Anything that improves a connection is better practice. But more so, anything that improves the "longevity" of the connection is good practice. I got into the habit of "tinning" using solder - fine stranded conductors. Yes this is time consuming, most likely OTT and probably unnecessary for most applications but it ensured a very good reliable connection.
 
Anything that improves a connection is better practice. But more so, anything that improves the "longevity" of the connection is good practice. I got into the habit of "tinning" using solder - fine stranded conductors. Yes this is time consuming, most likely OTT and probably unnecessary for most applications but it ensured a very good reliable connection.

Quite the contrary.

Tinning should only be used with very specific applications.

Probably get away with it in a domestic environment as generally there isn't much vibration. However in industry, those connections will fail prematurely.

Again, the regs (526.9 approximate reg number) make reference to this and state that it should not be done.

Edit: Although I do remember the days that tinning joints was common practice. Terminals and connectors aren't as good quality as they used to be. An it was before the widespread availability of ferrules and insulated crimps/ related tools becoming cheap.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Tinning should only be used with very specific applications.

Edit: Although I do remember the days that tinning joints was common practice. Terminals and connectors aren't as good quality as they used to be. An it was before the widespread availability of ferrules and insulated crimps/ related tools becoming cheap.

I use ferrules and crimps these days, I was referring to way back when... :). Mainly for control panels and similar not on any industrial stuff per-say.
 

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 starter

cliffed

Arms
-
Joined
Location
Worcester
If you're a qualified, trainee, or retired electrician - Which country is it that your work will be / is / was aimed at?
United Kingdom
What type of forum member are you?
Electrical Engineer (Qualified)

Thread Information

Title
Stripping for fun,or bending over
Prefix
N/A
Forum
UK Electrical Forum
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
70
Unsolved
--

Advert

Thread statistics

Created
cliffed,
Last reply from
Deleted member 26818,
Replies
70
Views
9,672

Advert

Back
Top