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Percival P. Cassidy Percival P. Cassidy is offline
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Default "Fried" wirenut -- how?

On 08/26/08 07:33 am John Grabowski wrote:

Pulled a switch to replace it and noticed that
(c) there was a charred black mess that seemed to be "cooked"
insulation tape with a small area of something red and hard at the end
where the wires went in and the end of a screw sticking out of the
other end of this mess.

As I cut away the insulation tape, it became clear that this was a
"fried" wirenut, and that what had looked like screw threads was the
wire spiral that was gripping (or was supposed to be gripping) the
conductors.

The first time I ever saw a wirenut, I thought "What kind of a Rube
Goldberg kludge is this?" but I now understand that they are NEC
approved. So what would cause a wirenut to "fry" like this? Note: I
had never noticed any problems with the lights that the switch was
controlling, or with any other circuits fed through the wires being
held by that wirenut.


Most likely a loose connection caused the conductors to arc which
generated the heat.


Shouldn't the arc-fault breaker have caught
this? And wouldn't the lights and other devices fed from that circuit
have behaved erratically?

Perce