Matt Wilson
Member
I'm adding a few outlets and a switch in my garage, connecting the wiring together using junction boxes in the attic. I took care to try not to nick the wires while stripping the insulation, but while using my lineman's pliers to twist the ends of the wires together (before putting on the wire nuts), I boogered up (nicked) a couple of the wires pretty good. The lineman's pliers have very rough, serrated jaws, so I don't see how that's avoidable, especially since the copper wire is so soft. I went ahead and put the wire nuts on and closed up those junction boxes, but given how bad a couple of these wires look, I am a little concerned about leaving them that way. I've read that nicks are places where the wires can break, and of course, the electrical conductivity may also be reduced somewhat.
Even worse, I had one box where I wasn't using my head and I twisted the wires in the wrong direction (opposite the tightening direction of the nut), then realized my mistake, untwisted and straightened the wires out with the lineman's pliers, which made more nicks, and then twisted them back together in the correct direction with the pliers and put the nut back on. That one really has a lot of gouges, and now the wire has been work hardened by the twisting, untwisting and re-twisting, so it may be more brittle and sensitive to the nicks.
How big a deal is this? Do I need to cut off the nicked parts and start over? How do I avoid this to begin with, since the lineman's pliers cause this kind of damage? Surely every electrician must run into this.
Thanks.
Even worse, I had one box where I wasn't using my head and I twisted the wires in the wrong direction (opposite the tightening direction of the nut), then realized my mistake, untwisted and straightened the wires out with the lineman's pliers, which made more nicks, and then twisted them back together in the correct direction with the pliers and put the nut back on. That one really has a lot of gouges, and now the wire has been work hardened by the twisting, untwisting and re-twisting, so it may be more brittle and sensitive to the nicks.
How big a deal is this? Do I need to cut off the nicked parts and start over? How do I avoid this to begin with, since the lineman's pliers cause this kind of damage? Surely every electrician must run into this.
Thanks.
Once or twice is all you're going to do in any given job. 3 is rather easy with ANY wirenut, for 5, the winged ones are golden and a tool is STILL not needed. The wings take all the fatigueing of your fingers out of the job. Still, I'm not opposed to weaker guys using tools, just pre-twisting for my own needs.