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[email protected] August 16th 18 04:45 PM

Metal cable clips
 
What sort are you using to meet the 18th edn requirement? There seems to be close to nothing on ebay, & screwsatan et al are charging high prices for what are little more than strips of coke can.


NT

Andy Burns[_13_] August 16th 18 04:57 PM

Metal cable clips
 
wrote:

What sort are you using to meet the 18th edn requirement?


Maybe more will be available by the time it goes live next January?

Jim K[_3_] August 16th 18 05:21 PM

Metal cable clips
 
Andy Burns Wrote in message:
wrote:

What sort are you using to meet the 18th edn requirement?


Maybe more will be available by the time it goes live next January?


;-)
--
--
Jim K


----Android NewsGroup Reader----
http://usenet.sinaapp.com/

harry August 16th 18 06:08 PM

Metal cable clips
 
On Thursday, 16 August 2018 16:45:40 UTC+1, wrote:
What sort are you using to meet the 18th edn requirement? There seems to be close to nothing on ebay, & screwsatan et al are charging high prices for what are little more than strips of coke can.


NT


Google:- buckle cable clips.

[email protected] August 16th 18 06:56 PM

Metal cable clips
 
On Thursday, 16 August 2018 18:08:23 UTC+1, harry wrote:
On Thursday, 16 August 2018 16:45:40 UTC+1, tabby wrote:
What sort are you using to meet the 18th edn requirement? There seems to be close to nothing on ebay, & screwsatan et al are charging high prices for what are little more than strips of coke can.


NT


Google:- buckle cable clips.


same high prices


NT

[email protected] August 16th 18 06:57 PM

Metal cable clips
 
On Thursday, 16 August 2018 16:57:53 UTC+1, Andy Burns wrote:
tabbypurr:

What sort are you using to meet the 18th edn requirement?


Maybe more will be available by the time it goes live next January?


that seems fairly obvious

charles August 16th 18 07:30 PM

Metal cable clips
 
In article ,
wrote:
On Thursday, 16 August 2018 18:08:23 UTC+1, harry wrote:
On Thursday, 16 August 2018 16:45:40 UTC+1, tabby wrote:
What sort are you using to meet the 18th edn requirement? There seems
to be close to nothing on ebay, & screwsatan et al are charging high
prices for what are little more than strips of coke can.


NT


Google:- buckle cable clips.


same high prices



When I learned about electrical installation, all there were were metal
buckles and then came these plastic clips. ;-)

--
from KT24 in Surrey, England
"I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle

Cynic[_2_] August 17th 18 08:34 AM

Metal cable clips
 
Memories of sore fingers and thumbs using metal buckle clips. Surely some enterprising soul will create a one nail clip similar to current plastic ones but which doesn't melt in a fire. (Except of course most metals do melt at some point)

Jim K[_3_] August 17th 18 09:01 AM

Metal cable clips
 
Cynic Wrote in message:
Memories of sore fingers and thumbs using metal buckle clips. Surely some enterprising soul will create a one nail clip similar to current plastic ones but which doesn't melt in a fire. (Except of course most metals do melt at some point)


Asbestos' finest hour beckons....
--
--
Jim K


----Android NewsGroup Reader----
http://usenet.sinaapp.com/

[email protected] August 17th 18 10:02 AM

Metal cable clips
 
On Friday, 17 August 2018 08:34:48 UTC+1, Cynic wrote:

Memories of sore fingers and thumbs using metal buckle clips. Surely some enterprising soul will create a one nail clip similar to current plastic ones but which doesn't melt in a fire. (Except of course most metals do melt at some point)


I've always wondered if a bit of metal could be embedded in the current design of plastic clip. I'd forgotten about the sore fingers.


NT

Andy Burns[_13_] August 17th 18 10:11 AM

Metal cable clips
 
wrote:

I've always wondered if a bit of metal could be embedded in the current design of plastic clip.


Or is there a thermosetting plastic that could be used (i.e not too
brittle, doesn't crumble instead of melt in a fire etc)?

Tim Watts[_3_] August 17th 18 10:17 AM

Metal cable clips
 
On 17/08/18 10:02, wrote:
On Friday, 17 August 2018 08:34:48 UTC+1, Cynic wrote:

Memories of sore fingers and thumbs using metal buckle clips. Surely some enterprising soul will create a one nail clip similar to current plastic ones but which doesn't melt in a fire. (Except of course most metals do melt at some point)


I've always wondered if a bit of metal could be embedded in the current design of plastic clip. I'd forgotten about the sore fingers.


NT


It would be very easy to make a retrofit u-sleeve that fitted over the
top of a standard plastic clip and which the same nail held in place.
Plastic protects cable from sharpish metal edge. Old clips can be used
up. New clips can be sold with metal in place.

Robin August 17th 18 10:34 AM

Metal cable clips
 
On 17/08/2018 10:17, Tim Watts wrote:
On 17/08/18 10:02, wrote:
On Friday, 17 August 2018 08:34:48 UTC+1, CynicÂ* wrote:

Memories of sore fingers and thumbs using metal buckle clips. Surely
some enterprising soul will create a one nail clip similar to current
plastic ones but which doesn't melt in a fire. (Except of course most
metals do melt at some point)


I've always wondered if a bit of metal could be embedded in the
current design of plastic clip. I'd forgotten about the sore fingers.


NT


It would be very easy to make a retrofit u-sleeve that fitted over the
top of a standard plastic clip and which the same nail held in place.
Plastic protects cable from sharpish metal edge. Old clips can be used
up. New clips can be sold with metal in place.


Possibly:

a. the time cost of removing the nail, fitting the sleeve and then
replacing the nail would exceed the saving for pros, and pros dominate
the market? plus

b. there's little or no profit to be made in of developing, certifying
and marketing a product which has only a limited life (and double and
redouble that if you are an existing manufacturer of cable clips as any
sales of the add-on displace sales of new fire-rated clips)?


But if you think there's a market for your product then go for it: we
need profitable entrepreneurs!

--
Robin
reply-to address is (intended to be) valid

[email protected] August 17th 18 10:38 AM

Metal cable clips
 
On Friday, 17 August 2018 10:34:59 UTC+1, Robin wrote:
On 17/08/2018 10:17, Tim Watts wrote:
On 17/08/18 10:02, tabbypurr wrote:
On Friday, 17 August 2018 08:34:48 UTC+1, CynicÂ* wrote:

Memories of sore fingers and thumbs using metal buckle clips. Surely
some enterprising soul will create a one nail clip similar to current
plastic ones but which doesn't melt in a fire. (Except of course most
metals do melt at some point)

I've always wondered if a bit of metal could be embedded in the
current design of plastic clip. I'd forgotten about the sore fingers.


NT


It would be very easy to make a retrofit u-sleeve that fitted over the
top of a standard plastic clip and which the same nail held in place.
Plastic protects cable from sharpish metal edge. Old clips can be used
up. New clips can be sold with metal in place.


Possibly:

a. the time cost of removing the nail, fitting the sleeve and then
replacing the nail would exceed the saving for pros, and pros dominate
the market? plus

b. there's little or no profit to be made in of developing, certifying
and marketing a product which has only a limited life (and double and
redouble that if you are an existing manufacturer of cable clips as any
sales of the add-on displace sales of new fire-rated clips)?


But if you think there's a market for your product then go for it: we
need profitable entrepreneurs!


and you can't reinsert nails unless you glue them in.

Robin August 17th 18 10:43 AM

Metal cable clips
 
On 17/08/2018 10:38, wrote:


and you can't reinsert nails unless you glue them in.


Cite, please?

--
Robin
reply-to address is (intended to be) valid

Rod Speed August 17th 18 10:48 AM

Metal cable clips
 


"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:38, wrote:


and you can't reinsert nails unless you glue them in.


Cite, please?


It isnt a legal requirement, just basic physics, so no cite required. Try
it.


Robin August 17th 18 11:02 AM

Metal cable clips
 
On 17/08/2018 10:48, Rod Speed wrote:


"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:38, wrote:


and you can't reinsert nails unless you glue them in.


Cite, please?


It isnt a legal requirement, just basic physics, so no cite required.
Try it.


This is about reinserting the nails in the plastic cable clip, not in
the original hole.

I cannot see why anyone would envisage reinserting a nail in the same
hole when (a) the new requirement is not retrospective and (b) a cable
clip can in any event be moved fractionally to use a new hole

--
Robin
reply-to address is (intended to be) valid

Rod Speed August 17th 18 11:12 AM

Metal cable clips
 


"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:48, Rod Speed wrote:


"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:38, wrote:


and you can't reinsert nails unless you glue them in.


Cite, please?


It isnt a legal requirement, just basic physics, so no cite required. Try
it.


This is about reinserting the nails in the plastic cable clip, not in the
original hole.

I cannot see why anyone would envisage reinserting a nail in the same hole
when (a) the new requirement is not retrospective and (b) a cable clip can
in any event be moved fractionally to use a new hole


That isnt reinserting, thats a new hole.


Robin August 17th 18 11:20 AM

Metal cable clips
 
On 17/08/2018 11:12, Rod Speed wrote:


"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:48, Rod Speed wrote:


"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:38, wrote:


and you can't reinsert nails unless you glue them in.


Cite, please?

It isnt a legal requirement, just basic physics, so no cite required.
Try it.


This is about reinserting the nails in the plastic cable clip, not in
the original hole.

I cannot see why anyone would envisage reinserting a nail in the same
hole when (a) the new requirement is not retrospective and (b) a cable
clip can in any event be moved fractionally to use a new hole


That isnt reinserting, thats a new hole.


If it's not "reinserting" the nail in the plastic cable clip then what
gerund do you recommend be used instead?

--
Robin
reply-to address is (intended to be) valid

[email protected] August 17th 18 11:33 AM

Metal cable clips
 
On Friday, 17 August 2018 11:20:32 UTC+1, Robin wrote:
On 17/08/2018 11:12, Rod Speed wrote:
"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:48, Rod Speed wrote:
"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:38, tabbypurr wrote:


and you can't reinsert nails unless you glue them in.


Cite, please?

It isnt a legal requirement, just basic physics, so no cite required.
Try it.

This is about reinserting the nails in the plastic cable clip, not in
the original hole.

I cannot see why anyone would envisage reinserting a nail in the same
hole when (a) the new requirement is not retrospective and (b) a cable
clip can in any event be moved fractionally to use a new hole


That isnt reinserting, thats a new hole.


If it's not "reinserting" the nail in the plastic cable clip then what
gerund do you recommend be used instead?


lol. Usenet!

Tim Watts[_3_] August 17th 18 12:41 PM

Metal cable clips
 
On 17/08/18 10:34, Robin wrote:
On 17/08/2018 10:17, Tim Watts wrote:
On 17/08/18 10:02, wrote:
On Friday, 17 August 2018 08:34:48 UTC+1, CynicÂ* wrote:

Memories of sore fingers and thumbs using metal buckle clips. Surely
some enterprising soul will create a one nail clip similar to
current plastic ones but which doesn't melt in a fire. (Except of
course most metals do melt at some point)

I've always wondered if a bit of metal could be embedded in the
current design of plastic clip. I'd forgotten about the sore fingers.


NT


It would be very easy to make a retrofit u-sleeve that fitted over the
top of a standard plastic clip and which the same nail held in place.
Plastic protects cable from sharpish metal edge. Old clips can be used
up. New clips can be sold with metal in place.


Possibly:

a.Â*Â*Â* the time cost of removing the nail, fitting the sleeve and then
replacing the nail would exceed the saving for pros, and pros dominate
the market? plus

b.Â*Â*Â* there's little or no profit to be made in of developing,
certifying and marketing a product which has only a limited life (and
double and redouble that if you are an existing manufacturer of cable
clips as any sales of the add-on displace sales of new fire-rated clips)?


Maybe on the retro fit I'd agree.

But a) are you telling me cable clips are certified? I'd be surprised.

b) It would be a minor adaption to an existing product that for new
production makes sense.




But if you think there's a market for your product then go for it: we
need profitable entrepreneurs!


I don't "do* being an entrepreneur :) I'd be crap.

Robin August 17th 18 02:35 PM

Metal cable clips
 
On 17/08/2018 12:41, Tim Watts wrote:
On 17/08/18 10:34, Robin wrote:
On 17/08/2018 10:17, Tim Watts wrote:
On 17/08/18 10:02, wrote:
On Friday, 17 August 2018 08:34:48 UTC+1, CynicÂ* wrote:

Memories of sore fingers and thumbs using metal buckle clips.
Surely some enterprising soul will create a one nail clip similar
to current plastic ones but which doesn't melt in a fire. (Except
of course most metals do melt at some point)

I've always wondered if a bit of metal could be embedded in the
current design of plastic clip. I'd forgotten about the sore fingers.


NT


It would be very easy to make a retrofit u-sleeve that fitted over
the top of a standard plastic clip and which the same nail held in
place. Plastic protects cable from sharpish metal edge. Old clips can
be used up. New clips can be sold with metal in place.


Possibly:

a.Â*Â*Â* the time cost of removing the nail, fitting the sleeve and then
replacing the nail would exceed the saving for pros, and pros dominate
the market? plus

b.Â*Â*Â* there's little or no profit to be made in of developing,
certifying and marketing a product which has only a limited life (and
double and redouble that if you are an existing manufacturer of cable
clips as any sales of the add-on displace sales of new fire-rated clips)?


Maybe on the retro fit I'd agree.

But a) are you telling me cable clips are certified? I'd be surprised.


My mistake. I misremembered the BS for fire alarms.

b) It would be a minor adaption to an existing product that for new
production makes sense.




But if you think there's a market for your product then go for it: we
need profitable entrepreneurs!


I don't "do* being an entrepreneur :) I'd be crap.



--
Robin
reply-to address is (intended to be) valid

Robin August 17th 18 02:35 PM

Metal cable clips
 
On 17/08/2018 11:33, wrote:
On Friday, 17 August 2018 11:20:32 UTC+1, Robin wrote:
On 17/08/2018 11:12, Rod Speed wrote:
"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:48, Rod Speed wrote:
"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:38, tabbypurr wrote:


and you can't reinsert nails unless you glue them in.


Cite, please?

It isnt a legal requirement, just basic physics, so no cite required.
Try it.

This is about reinserting the nails in the plastic cable clip, not in
the original hole.

I cannot see why anyone would envisage reinserting a nail in the same
hole when (a) the new requirement is not retrospective and (b) a cable
clip can in any event be moved fractionally to use a new hole

That isnt reinserting, thats a new hole.


If it's not "reinserting" the nail in the plastic cable clip then what
gerund do you recommend be used instead?


lol. Usenet!


It's DIY gerund-grinding, innit?

--
Robin
reply-to address is (intended to be) valid

Rod Speed August 17th 18 08:32 PM

Metal cable clips
 


"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 11:12, Rod Speed wrote:


"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:48, Rod Speed wrote:


"Robin" wrote in message
...
On 17/08/2018 10:38, wrote:


and you can't reinsert nails unless you glue them in.


Cite, please?

It isnt a legal requirement, just basic physics, so no cite required.
Try it.

This is about reinserting the nails in the plastic cable clip, not in
the original hole.

I cannot see why anyone would envisage reinserting a nail in the same
hole when (a) the new requirement is not retrospective and (b) a cable
clip can in any event be moved fractionally to use a new hole


That isnt reinserting, thats a new hole.


If it's not "reinserting" the nail in the plastic cable clip then what
gerund do you recommend be used instead?


Either a new hole close to the old one or use some glue if reusing the old
hole.


Peeler[_2_] August 18th 18 10:18 AM

Metal cable clips
 
On Sat, 18 Aug 2018 05:32:16 +1000, cantankerous geezer Rot Speed blabbered,
again:

This is about reinserting the nails in the plastic cable clip, not in
the original hole.

I cannot see why anyone would envisage reinserting a nail in the same
hole when (a) the new requirement is not retrospective and (b) a cable
clip can in any event be moved fractionally to use a new hole

That isnt reinserting, that¢s a new hole.


If it's not "reinserting" the nail in the plastic cable clip then what
gerund do you recommend be used instead?


Either a new hole close to the old one or use some glue if reusing the old
hole.


snicker

https://thetravellingtiles.files.wor...b6f9820001.jpg

--
Sqwertz to Rot Speed:
"This is just a hunch, but I'm betting you're kinda an argumentative
asshole.
MID:


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