@@dogwalker666 depends where. If that is/was the aproved code of practice there, it may. Also i've worked with plenty old fully qualified electricians that never updated their trainings, methods or tools and seemed ok. Until deciding to get fully qualified trough school instead of apprenticeship and finding out that plenty work simply wrong and i was tought bad stuff on site by fully qualified electricians.
@@sedatmehmed4371 that's just regular house wire. It to be completely protected. The rape is bad. Wire nuts great. Over twisting of the wired w that gun is bad as well. I'm sure if I saw the final product there would be tons of bad stuff
Fail 1: no listed wire connection fittings (devices). Fail 2: no bushings or listed cable connectors into the box. Fail 3: not enough of the outer jacket in the box. Fail 4: no equipment ground in the metal box. Box not properly bonded.
Splice + Soldering = Best Possible Connection Splice alone is good, but it MUST BE DONE WELL AND TIGHT. In Poland we have been using splices for decades and its been fine. Media and Politics are pushing WAGO, because WAGO wants to make money.
The tape makes it so much better. what a joke Some absolute sausage will go and copy this somewhere no doubt. Shouldn’t be allowed to be posted. Have a word RU-vid
Firstly put grommets in there. Secondly wheres the earth to the back box. Thirdly use conductors which signify live neutral and earth. Fourthly use different coloured tape you diy bodge job builder.
I’m not an electrician or anything, and I barely know anything about electrical stuff. However I do know is that is not safe whatsoever. Your gonna burn your house down or get shocked. This is literally why electrician exist.
All western electricians crying "Use wagoooo!!". We get it Wago is easier to work with, easier to do repairs (if you use one's with the levers otherwise not so much) but splicing isn't "an immediate fire hazard". Domestic electricity has been around for a bit longer than your beloved wago connectors don't you think? FYI splicing + soldering is the only method approved by NASA for joining cables on aircraft - just a food for thought
Yep, screwblock terminals are so expensive these days. Like, a pound fifty to accommodate all the wires (if you shop particularly badly)? Even wirenuts would be better than this.
Nach VDE0100 ist das verboten, weil es erstens nicht dauerhaft kontaktiert und deshalb Brandgefahr besteht. Zweitens ist so eine Isolierung nicht auf Dauer haltbar und damit unsicher.
im not electrician expert... Still not understand why two ❌ and one ✅ They have the same twisting act... Same color of wire... Same finishing tape... And the box it self just seems like from plastic, not metal...
So for you electricians do you cringe because it's done the way you learned or is it because it does have any connectors .. so if he uses a connector then add electrical tape will that be better ??? So he doesn't use connectors but tapes the heck out of it ... What happens now? I'm just curious because I just am lol
Well that looks seriously dangerous and an instant fire hazard. Together with using the same colour insulation tape on all conductors. Use WAGO connectors instead.
Los cables están muy cortos. Se deja 20 cm por lo menos de largo. Esa cinta es para el cable de protección cable tierra. Es mejor usar regletas o borneras para unir cables.
Che schifo. Semplicemente. La normativa qui non esiste, il nastro isolante invece dei morsetti, poi nastro giallo verde che non ha nulla di corretto e se devi aggiungere una linea su questa legatura non sarà mai possibile.
What country is this?! Brown, grey, black? You just twist the wires and tape them?! No wire nuts?! I mean, the wires are twisted pretty tight with a lot of surface contact, but there's nothing to keep the wires from unraveling except tape. Electrical in the Twilight Zone!
Brown, Grey and Black are the standard colours in steel armoured cable. Brown = live, Grey = Neutral and should have a blue sleeve and Black = Earth/cpc. And sleeved green/yellow.