rburke65
Well-known member
Lineman pliers and years ago, we always twisted the wires. Strip the ends long, and get the insulation even.twist, and then cut wire ends end....apply wire nut
I started wiring my shop a few weeks ago. Came here and saw the recommendation of wagu lever nuts. Bought some, and probably won’t ever use wire nuts again. Hold way better than wire nuts.
Is there a trick to twisting the 4 wires together before putting a wire nut on?
just to stir the pot a little here
Lots of love here for the wagos, yet everyone poopoos the backstabbed receptacle and switch???
Twist-on nuts have been against the code in many places in Europe for years due to inability to properly inspect connection. Bad twist could result in fire.
Ideal makes a screwdriver with socket that fits most sizes of wire nuts. They really do great for getting them twisted in the wire nut. You can even screw them so hard that the wires will push through the end of the wire nut. They are available in both phillips, slot and multi bit with a ratchet.. I love them, try and find them as they relieve a lot of stress on fingers that are not getting any more flexible...
First time I've heard of this (I'm a DIY'er). So I looked it up:Wires should not be twisted before applying a wire nut, that will tend to inhibit the wire nut from making a good connection. Read and follow the manufacturers recommended practice for the wire nuts.

In principle, a wire nut is not a very good connection, even if it’s perfectly done. They are used because they are cheap and that’s one everyone’s been using for 75 years.
It’s the same discussion as sweat vs press. People dig in on traditional methods even when something better comes along.
First time I've heard of this (I'm a DIY'er). So I looked it up:
https://www.idealind.com/content/dam/electrical/assets/WireTermination/WireConnectors/TwistOn/WireNut/WireNut%20WireConnector%20Instructions.pdf
You are correct, though they do say pretwisting is optional. Which means I've been doing extra work all this time when all I needed to do was line up the ends and screw the wire nut on - I did this once, and the connection came loose and melted the wire nut. Always pretwisted after that. But I was in a very awkward position and could barely reach, so that probably had a lot to do with the failure.
Thanks for the education.![]()
I know they sell the 4 wire push connectors. But I dont trust them with the hot wires. Is there a trick to twisting the 4 wires together before putting a wire nut on? I am learning electrical and **** at this
No, those instructions are for a series of wire nut models. The example they used was one solid and one stranded. Doesn't mean that's the only combination those instructions apply to.The link for the instructions are for one solid wire and one stranded wire.
When there is a solid and a stranded together, I'll use the wire nut only for the twisting , but if there are two solid I'll pre-twist with some pliers.
In principle, a wire nut is not a very good connection, even if it’s perfectly done. They are used because they are cheap and that’s one everyone’s been using for 75 years.
A few years back, I did some work for one of the big oil companies up on the North Slope. Wire nuts were not allowed in any connection. We scoffed at the time and did what they wanted because we didn’t have a choice. My journeyman of 40+ years was a little pissed to learn something new, and be told he was wrong. We used some version of a wago, don’t know what brand, but we had LOTS of “failures” while installing them. Possibly a practice thing, but we wound up wasting quite a few as getting the wires to seat caused issues. We were using stranded XHHW #12. I remember they wouldn’t let us use the lever type, only push in. The lever type probably would have made all the difference.
Sounds like the same folks whom decided back stabbing receptacles and switches was a good idea. Engineered to fail.
It’s not an honest discussion to lump levernuts in with push connectors.