owen":5ssmgbv9 said:All that fuss and you could have just stripped back the flex and connected straight to those connections. :shock:
owen":17781ph2 said:All that fuss and you could have just stripped back the flex and connected straight to those connections. :shock:
DTR":1geanqw1 said:owen":1geanqw1 said:All that fuss and you could have just stripped back the flex and connected straight to those connections. :shock:
Where I work that kind of termination isn't considered reliable enough, hence the crimps (or a Ross Courtney!). Solid core would have been acceptable formed into a loop around the screw.
owen":2x97g93i said:Ah right didn't know that.. nearly every oven I have changed ( I work for a landlord so do bits and bobs of everything) has been connected that way without any crimps. Maybe next time I'll crimp them (probably not).
Slightly off tack, but I worked with a mechanic who was meticulous. I commented one day, and he told me he was apprenticed to an old man who used to say if it's meant to move, grease it. If it's ever meant to move again coppaslip it. If it's meant never to move, locktite it. You might be the poor sod who gets the job back.n0legs":890bdepu said:owen":890bdepu said:All that fuss and you could have just stripped back the flex and connected straight to those connections. :shock:
"If you go above and beyond, you rarely have to return"
John Roberts
Senior Electrical Installation Lecturer
S.Wa.E.B
bugbear":2bu2yzdl said:I have a dim memory than you're not meant to use solder on high-current connections, due to galvanic corrosion
and/or thermocouple heating effects, which is why connection blocks (AKA terminal strips) are used, so that everything
is (nearly) the same metal.
Can the more knowledgeable/experienced comment on this?
BugBear
DTR":gjtc2rs7 said:bugbear":gjtc2rs7 said:I have a dim memory than you're not meant to use solder on high-current connections, due to galvanic corrosion
and/or thermocouple heating effects, which is why connection blocks (AKA terminal strips) are used, so that everything
is (nearly) the same metal.
Can the more knowledgeable/experienced comment on this?
BugBear
Intriguing... we use a very large number of soldered connections on circuits pulling a continuous 20A. What is the definition of high current? In any case, heavy duty crimps are tinned...
bugbear":1nscee64 said:I have a dim memory than you're not meant to use solder on high-current connections, due to galvanic corrosion
and/or thermocouple heating effects, which is why connection blocks (AKA terminal strips) are used, so that everything
is (nearly) the same metal.
Can the more knowledgeable/experienced comment on this?
BugBear
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