Jaymack:
If anything, they will be more conductive;it's probably the insulating material or installing temperature that's different.
Jaymack
Zoomup:
Jaymack:
If anything, they will be more conductive;it's probably the insulating material or installing temperature that's different.
JaymackAt the same room temperature the old tails are easier to bend than the new stuff. Even when in my hot sun heated van the new 25mm2 stuff is very difficult to bend.
Z.
That leaves the insulating material ...... Thickness or consistency of insulating material; and a single screw fixing will lead to a swivel connection.
Jaymack
Colin Jenkins:
I agree with the comments above that present-day meter tails are much harder to fan into terminals than they used to be, for whatever reason. I think this is the primary cause of the consumer unit fires that led to the Amendment 3 metal enclosures. We would perhaps have been better served if the problem(s) had been researched more thoroughly and eliminated rather than just enclosing it/them. A seven-strand 25mm tail does not want to bend into the restricted access to a cage clamp. Using a torque driver does not alter the situation - the cable does not want to be in there and will squirm and twist over several weeks after installation until eventually it has relaxed and then there is the risk that it is no longer as secure as it was when first installed. Clamping the tail in the consumer unit may help but does not eliminate this problem. Should this situation be followed by the smart meter crew arriving and overlooking checking/tightening the consumer unit incoming tail connections, then the consequences can be serious.
Regards,
Colin Jenkins.
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