I want to make an extension cord. Who makes the best plug ends (female)?
daniel woodhead makes very good cord caps

how many do you need? I just got in some black/white levitons p/n 5266, 5269. They are super high quality, on par with hubbell.
Stay away from mcmaster for electrical stuff -WAY too expensive.
I didn't hear him say cost was a factor... As he was looking at a $1300 hand lamp, Lol.
how many do you need? I just got in some black/white levitons p/n 5266, 5269. They are super high quality, on par with hubbell.
Stay away from mcmaster for electrical stuff -WAY too expensive.
I didn't hear him say cost was a factor... As he was looking at a $1300 hand lamp, Lol.
I just decided I will need 1 female in addition to 1 male.
Are those levitons rubberized or plastic?
Doing some more digging and saw this: (whoops)
http://www.platt.com/Products/ProductVendors.aspx?categoryID=2911
When you can't afford an explosion, I can see where that would come in handy.
I certainly don't need it, though. Just thought it was interesting that they make something like that.
I also may have some extras.
- David
Marinco connectors are nice, but not as rugged as the hubbell and leviton devices. Woodhead is pretty good, but again not quite as rugged as the hubbell and leviton.
I would rate them in this order (for industrial grade (most mfgr p/n 5266/5269)
1: Hubbell & Leviton
2: Woodhead
3: Marinco
4: pass & seymour
5: cooper
What about Bryant?
Explosion proof stuff is pricey.
Got lucky today...
Driving around town and saw a short, couple foot extension cord with male and female ends sitting in the middle of the road. Pulled over and grabbed it. The male end was toast... but the female end is a 20A Hubbell.
Too bad it's a 20A model and not a 15A model like I need.
Is it a Twistlock? A standard 20A female parallel blade connector (NEMA 5-20) will accept 15A male plugs just fine.
I design coating and automation machinery for C1D1 (the worst) and C1D2 areas. The explosion proof stuff is pricey for many reasons, but the primary reasons are getting it approved for use in the classification and because the liability is rediculous. One spark could kill lots of folks and destroy lots of stuff if the product fails. The electrical requirements of these areas can be quite a challenge to overcome.
Scott
I thought you weren't allowed to use 20A devices when the wire is rated for 15A.
I thought you weren't allowed to use 20A devices when the wire is rated for 15A.