benjamintmiller
Well-known member
I have a torque screwdriver that I use and have been surprised at how much torque the specs call for. The larger wires need almost as much torque as I am capable of applying with a screwdriver.
Guys that have done a bit of engine work have good feel. I can come really close and am out them farmer tight. I had an inspector check my last job at main lugs and was happy . With alum conductors it doesnt hurt to let them sit overnight, tighten a pinch again. I spray a light shot of wd down those bars and a little no lox on lug screws. I don't want any screw to tighten with a squeak.
Guys that have done a bit of engine work have good feel. I can come really close and am out them farmer tight. I had an inspector check my last job at main lugs and was happy . With alum conductors it doesnt hurt to let them sit overnight, tighten a pinch again. I spray a light shot of wd down those bars and a little no lox on lug screws. I don't want any screw to tighten with a squeak.
I have seen grease on the service entrance cable and big allen head screws used to connect them to the panel, what's that for?
Never seen any on neutrals or grounds leaving the panel but I wouldn't think a little dab of a solvent oil like WD would hurt.
What kinds of tools do you use for simple outlets and panel wiring?
I have seen grease on the service entrance cable and big allen head screws used to connect them to the panel, what's that for?
Never seen any on neutrals or grounds leaving the panel but I wouldn't think a little dab of a solvent oil like WD would hurt.
What kinds of tools do you use for simple outlets and panel wiring?
were the conductors aluminum? If so then it was an anti-ox grease for keeping the aluminum from oxidizing...
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Not sure about your question on kinds of tools? Screwdrivers, side cutters, wire strippers, etc. ?
Spraying oil in electrical panels? Now thats ridiculous and hack work!
Do u wipe it down afterwords?
were the conductors aluminum? If so then it was an anti-ox grease for keeping the aluminum from oxidizing...
You wont see anti-ox grease on the neutrals or grounds leaving the panel because they are copper, the anti-ox grease is only used for aluminum conductors.
I am not talking about hosing it down but a drop of WD on a steel screw wont hurt a thing. I use no lox on the lug screws, copper or aluminum. Any time a screw squeaks during a tighten it cant be good.
Long shot, but have seen it several times in industrial buildings.
Somebody is going to do some arc welding and attaches the ground clamp in a convenient place. But not the right place so the welding current goes thru a neutral/ground wire on to the bar in the fuse panel and then on to where the welding is done.
Great fun to repair!
Ola
robertson strips out too. Straight blade all the way.
acx ftw.
^ ^ ^ ^ Decipher please ???
Is that Nvidia cooling fan . . . . For the Win ???![]()
There may be different kinds of screws in the same bar. The little screws are steel.
They use steel plates and screws on alum lugs in meter bases all the time. A little water displacer spray that drys isn't an explosive, where you guys learn all this?