Hi:
An errant drill bit rubbed against the outer jacket of the SE cable going into my new 100amp sub panel. I want to stress the cable was rubbed against, not drilled straight into.
The hole is less than the size of a pencil eraser.
It is a 2 awg cable with a grey outer jacket, webbed translucent layer, and then 4 insulated conductors. The insulation on one of the conductors was very slightly rubbed - just barely touched - the conductor is still fully insulated with no metal showing. None of the other insulation was touched.
Electrical inspection was just passed. Can this jacket be repaired in a way that will make the cable 100% safe for years to come? The problem area is in the vertical run of wire in the stud bay, directly beneath the panel. My research identified people using 3m 33, 88, 2228 etc.
I can skip the wall insulation in that stud bay (interior garage wall) if that makes it safer.
Do the conductors get hot where this might ever cause a problem?
Thanks!
An errant drill bit rubbed against the outer jacket of the SE cable going into my new 100amp sub panel. I want to stress the cable was rubbed against, not drilled straight into.
The hole is less than the size of a pencil eraser.
Electrical inspection was just passed. Can this jacket be repaired in a way that will make the cable 100% safe for years to come? The problem area is in the vertical run of wire in the stud bay, directly beneath the panel. My research identified people using 3m 33, 88, 2228 etc.
I can skip the wall insulation in that stud bay (interior garage wall) if that makes it safer.
Do the conductors get hot where this might ever cause a problem?
Thanks!
