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I was taught this by the guy I first worked for. He explained it as, do whatever you can whilst each tool is in your hand, don’t keep changing tools every two seconds and we’ve always set up “ production lines” at work, to do exactly this.
I wish every cabinet manufacturer used these cable idents. They are so easy to find anywhere in a cabinet. Even if you don't have the wiring diagram it helps to undestand how it's all connected so much easyier!
I will start to work wiring electrical panels soon, and your videos help me a lot to understand and learn how I have to do that job. Thanks! Saludos desde Perú 🇵🇪
Those are called wires, not cables. And you can save additional time by not using ferrules on the other end of the wire. Because you are connecting them to spring clamp terminals. Spring clamp terminals don't require ferrules. Ferrules are only used in conjunction with screw terminals.
I started wiring not so long time ago, and that is first thing which I thought myself (smart method) try to wire like production line! I still do dumb way sometimes just to switch of my brain and dont rush.
and after that, there are the screw type terminals, which are also rather dumb time killer these days, aren't they? min. 3-4 sec of screwing each instead of 1s for a push-in
Modern control panels are already faster to complete. When I broke out as an apprentice a control panel involved something called lacing most people would cut all the wires first as you had to lace them into looms. There was no PLC or wago connectors it was all relay in some applications diode logic. Those were the days 😂 but it did teach you to plan your job as there was no just adding a wire into a loom once it was all laced together🤬