nwav8tor
Well-known member
I'm a homeowner adding some lighting and power circuits in my garage. I purchased a package of copper crimp sleeves at HD that said to use a certain model of crimping tool. Unfortunately, I couldn't find that particular tool anywhere in town. I didn't even find it listed on the manufacturer's web site! Therefore, I just used the crimper on my electrical muti-purpose tool (stripper/plier/crimper/bolt cutter). Now I just heard that doing so might make me fail my inspection. I used the sleeves only for ground wire connections and used regular wire nuts for the hot and neutral connections.
What has your experience been with inspectors demanding to see the crimping tool you used and checking it against the info on the crimp sleeve packaging?
If you don't have the packaging available ("Oops, I tossed it after I was done making all the connections.") and the connections are tight will the inspector most likely just approve the ground connections?
I know all inspectors are different and my "mileage" might vary, but I'd be interested to hear your thoughts/experiences. I'd hate to have to cut them all off and redo the connections using "Greenies."
Paul
What has your experience been with inspectors demanding to see the crimping tool you used and checking it against the info on the crimp sleeve packaging?
If you don't have the packaging available ("Oops, I tossed it after I was done making all the connections.") and the connections are tight will the inspector most likely just approve the ground connections?
I know all inspectors are different and my "mileage" might vary, but I'd be interested to hear your thoughts/experiences. I'd hate to have to cut them all off and redo the connections using "Greenies."
Paul