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Timeline for soldering and shrink tubing NM wire

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

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Nov 12 at 20:44 answer added Jasen timeline score: 1
Nov 12 at 15:36 comment added NoSparksPlease Code doesn't always require a "good mechanical connection of copper to copper". There are many listed connecters (wagos, leverlocks, ilsco nimbus) that don't have any copper at all. The good mechanical connection in 110.14 refers specifically to solder connections.
Nov 12 at 14:38 history edited ron CC BY-SA 4.0
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Nov 12 at 14:30 history edited ron CC BY-SA 4.0
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Nov 12 at 8:31 comment added Harper - Reinstate Monica "what would prohibit" not how NEC works. Everything is forbidden except what is authorized. Read article 90 and 110.2 and 110.3
Nov 12 at 3:46 history edited nobody
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Nov 11 at 20:06 history edited isherwood CC BY-SA 4.0
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Nov 11 at 20:02 answer added NoSparksPlease timeline score: 4
Nov 11 at 17:54 answer added Robert Chapin timeline score: 1
Nov 11 at 16:10 comment added Mark Related: diy.stackexchange.com/questions/179562/…
Nov 11 at 15:40 comment added crip659 Not a code junky, but from what is written on this site, I believe the NEC requires all household voltage wire splices to be in UL listed accessible boxes, so there is no possibility of doing this behind drywall. I believe there were/are only one or two UL listed splice types that can be hidden behind drywall.
Nov 11 at 15:02 history asked ron CC BY-SA 4.0