I like these better.
![]()
I don't.Around here if you see insulated staples it screams DIY & usually poorly executed work.
This is a widely accepted opinion in the trade. Only with these white ones though.I don't.Around here if you see <those> insulated staples it screams DIY & usually poorly executed work.
You cannot blame poor workmanship on the material.And my house has some professional rework in places where uninsulated staples like the first post are driven crosswise and bent over or are missing half the joist in places.
This is a widely accepted opinion in the trade. Only with these white ones though.
Standard insulated throat metal ones (like the blue ones) are very common with professional electricians.
I have NEVER seen nor heard of any qualified professional electrician use those white ones.
IMO they are complete garbage.

If its not allowed how can it meet code? Code tells you what is and is not allowed.
Are you trying to fool the inspector into thinking the builder put the wire in?
Sent from my C5120 using Tapatalk 2
Gotcha. What about this wiring makes it not allowed? Electricians can almost always find a way to do it if you ask.
So you want to sneak it in? Are you sure that the builder & electrician are that stupid that they won't catch on at trim out time? If I was the EC on that job, I would be p*ssed.
Nope. You're not playing that card. Cost has NOTHING to do with it.........., and most importantly they cost more, hence the pro's don't use them.
Correct. Well, actually i'm trying to get in right after the inspector and before insulation. But if I don't, I stand a chance.
WOW! Just wow.I've been told by the builder that I can't make alterations myself because it is a liability for them and... they aren't making money on it. The last part wasn't told to me, but I can read between the lines and I understand.

I think the issue might be a truly custom home and a home built by a builder. The latter makes you commit to electrical at a certain date and you cannot change things after the date. I have a feeling thins is the case. If this is a custom home, then I would just have them do it. Would likely never be an issue but if something ever did happen then there would be no paper trail of the wiring and who did it. So it must then be the homeowner and their liability.