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Red Green Red Green is offline
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Default Field report on electrical push connectors

David Nebenzahl wrote in
s.com:

On 4/20/2011 4:01 PM Red Green spake thus:

George wrote in
:

On 4/20/2011 11:46 AM, Red Green wrote:

Remove more insulation than required. Twist them together
clockwise with linemans pliers. Cut off to proper length with the
linemans pliers. All are proper and same length. Wirenut. Now you
have a connection. Not instructions from the marketing
department.

Only my unprofessional opinion but when you remove a wirenut from
the above connection method, wires should not fall apart. This
only meaning the completed connection was safe and reliable. Not
that if a wire nut were to fall off the twisting was a backup.

But what would the problem be if they "fall apart" when you remove
the wirenut? The wirenut is providing the holding force.


Not that if a
wire nut were to fall off the twisting was a backup.

I have never seen a failure when you hold all of the ends parallel
and simply twist on a good quality wirenut.


Great.

Bottom line is do it any way you want when you're doing it. If you're
doing it for someone else, do it to code.

For those familiar with it, what does the NEC say? I'm really curious
being only a wanna-be myself.


What does the NEC say? about attaching wire nuts? Nothing, that's
what.


Otay! Duct tape it is!

At least so far as any technique for putting them on goes.

What I'm noticing is that everyone here seems to be a wimp when it
comes to twisting wires together (and I mean that in the nicest way).
Because when I twist on a wire nut, the wires end up getting twisted
together. I don't mean just the strands, but the insulated wires
themselves. Then I know that it's on good and tight.


Yep. Have seen it that way when removing something and made it that way
when assembling.


Pliers? Nah.