Jim, I'm curious to hear your thoughts on pig-tailed vs. daisy-chained wiring of outlets, if you have the time. Not necessarily per audio requirements, but in general.
TIA
TIA
Dealing with a power amp that need 20A connection
builder3124 posts12-26-2018 10:30am@builder3 If the joints and pigtail are made-up using an electrical spring wire connectors then pigtail is my choice over using the outlet to make the feed through connections. An electrical spring connector will expand and contract with the heating and cooling of the wire connection always keeping the connection tight. Examples of: 3M https://www.3m.com/3M/en_US/company-us/all-3m-products/~/3M-Electrical-Spring-Connector-412-BAG-Tan-... http://multimedia.3m.com/mws/media/41497O/3m-scotchlok-y-yellow-insulated-electrical-spring-connecto... https://www.egr.msu.edu/eceshop/Parts_Inventory/datasheets/insulated%20electrical%20spring%20wire%20... Ideal Twister® WIRE CONNECTORS (Tan) . Second choice would be twisting the solid conductors together then solder and tape the joint. This use to be the method of choice for residential house wiremen in my area. |
Jim, that looks great. When I built my shop, I used the pig-tail method on every outlet in the place, workshop, garage, and upstairs office. My thinking was that if I had an issue with an outlet, I wanted it confined to the one device, rather than everything downstream of the failure. I had an electrician or two suggest that I had went to a lot of extra work for nothing. I was still good with my choice, but was curious what was behind your comments. Thanks. |