
Better yet pitch the general panew and replace it with something better,maybe a 40 year old fed pac panel.![]()
And just how did you determine it was over tightened.
Why are you drilling it out? You can rest assured that the melted lug damaged at least the wire underneath it. And also cooked the closest insulation.
I'd be cutting back a bit instead. Can't you find an inch of wire to spare?
Looks like the insulation was not stripped back far enough.
Hi Guys,
When I worked for a living, part of our PM's included checking lug tightness.....
At home I kind of check all the lugs about once a year.......
They also tend to loosen up on their own......
Just sayin'
Bob
At my current house I ended up having to replace the breaker because the high resistance caused by the loose connection overheated the breaker. It caused it to pop a few times during high load I.E. furnace and range running before I had a chance to investigate and find out the cause.
Always remember,
TIGHT IS RIGHT!
With my own projects and helping various friends I have often found that feeds to main breaker panels are loose.
Isn't that a function of Aluminum wire? It loosens up over time and must be re-torqued. That's why they quit using it for branch circuits right?
At my current house I ended up having to replace the breaker because the high resistance caused by the loose connection overheated the breaker. It caused it to pop a few times during high load I.E. furnace and range running before I had a chance to investigate and find out the cause.
Lets see, this wire is loose,,, lets leave it that way after all it was torqued 20 years ago. To top it off a dry squeaking screw doesn't torque proper anyway and the only reason there isn't a procedure to lube them is they cant get all the chimps to do it the same, pretty much the same for car wheels so lets dumb it down another notch and use a no0ther tool to tell the installer how far to turn a common bolt and hope for the best that it actually clamped with enough force to hold this soft pressure connection.
If the lugs are torqued to manufacturers specs, it should not be retorqued, over tightening is as bad as not enough, and not using the proper tool & guessing that it's "tight enough" is improper also.
I think this is BS. If it needs to be torqued to 28 ft-lbs, and you come back and retorque it a year later to 28 ft-lbs... what's the difference? You are only changing ANYTHING if it is BELOW 28 ft-lbs of torque when you go to retorque it. Retorque does not mean you are over-tightening it.
That said, without the vibrations, shock loads and everything else things like lug nuts are subject to, I think a properly torqued lug probably never has to be re-torqued.
I have significant research and testing to prove you wrong.
Aluminum connectors are a funny animal. You can torque them down, and then check them 5 minutes later, and they are significantly looser than they were to start. This is known to the manufacturers, so it is designed around.
If you went back and checked it, it would indeed be lower than what you set it at, every time you check it. This is because the aluminum actually slowly yields from the pressure. If you keep re-torquing it, you continually deform the conductor, and eventually will cause it to fail.
Have u seen any evidence that copper can suffer from the same albeit much less since its harder??
I have significant research and testing to prove you wrong.
Aluminum connectors are a funny animal. You can torque them down, and then check them 5 minutes later, and they are significantly looser than they were to start. This is known to the manufacturers, so it is designed around.
If you went back and checked it, it would indeed be lower than what you set it at, every time you check it. This is because the aluminum actually slowly yields from the pressure. If you keep re-torquing it, you continually deform the conductor, and eventually will cause it to fail.
I agree with this hence my story about the aluminum wheels. Different though than tightening a loose connection we may find.I have significant research and testing to prove you wrong.
Aluminum connectors are a funny animal. You can torque them down, and then check them 5 minutes later, and they are significantly looser than they were to start. This is known to the manufacturers, so it is designed around.
If you went back and checked it, it would indeed be lower than what you set it at, every time you check it. This is because the aluminum actually slowly yields from the pressure. If you keep re-torquing it, you continually deform the conductor, and eventually will cause it to fail.
And just how did you determine it was over tightened.
Actually the correct way is to torque to specs and leave it alone, by torquing to specs means using a proper tool, not a WAG that it's tight enough, as the manufacturer has determined the correct amount.
According to the folks at the Aluminum Association
See question 10.
http://www.aluminum.org/resources/electrical-faqs-and-handbooks/electrical
Retorquing isn't necessary
According to the folks at the Aluminum Association
See question 10.
http://www.aluminum.org/resources/electrical-faqs-and-handbooks/electrical
Retorquing isn't necessary
Ok, but it also says:
"Connections should only be tightened if there is evidence of a loose connection."
Now how would you determine if the connection is loose?
I will add this however. If a dry connection is found to be loose, whether it be in copper or aluminum, the heat seen at the loose connection often leads to oxidation, and simply re-tightening it may no longer be sufficient. If I find a hot connection (I feel the need to point out that I have NO experience with aluminum wiring here, just copper and more exotic stuff, and aluminum lugs), I'm not simply going to turn a screw and walk away.
Also, one scary scenario I've seen, is when someone loses the screw from an aluminum terminal, and replaces it with a hardware store bought screw. Aluminum terminals always use aluminum screws, so that the parts expand and contract thermally together, which prevents thermal cycling from loosening the joint. Substitute a steel screw, and you WILL see failures.
Not all aluminum lugs have aluminum screws. Almost all neutral and ground bars in power panels are aluminum with zinc plated steel screws and accept wires in the 4-14 ga range. A fair number of connection and ground lugs are aluminum with steel screws as well. Larger sizes may have aluminium fasteners, but 4 ga and below frequently are zinc steel.