OP
madmac
It is over the top granted, I'll give you all that but I'd rather we went over the top and did left a top notch job that carried on good practice from previous regs as oldboy says.
And Tony..."If the coupling is screwed firmly to the root of the thread you will not get a tighter or more electrically sound connection." yes you will get a more tighter connection by using a lockring either side of a coupling, it's the same principle as locking two nuts together to turn a thread etc.
Also bright metal to bright metal you are correct but I was talking about metal clad (painted boxes).
And as for leaving burrs on trunking!!! That's the first bad practice to be knocked out of an apprentices head!! and not very proffesional at all! just use a serrated washer, end of.
I'm glad you don't suspend from long screwed rod Engineer54 but not all jobs have the alternative luxury to do a better install.
But I do like the idea of testing conduit with a ductor tester, never seen that before, again possibly down to time/cost factor but then again when installed with lockrings and serrated washers............
And Tony..."If the coupling is screwed firmly to the root of the thread you will not get a tighter or more electrically sound connection." yes you will get a more tighter connection by using a lockring either side of a coupling, it's the same principle as locking two nuts together to turn a thread etc.
Also bright metal to bright metal you are correct but I was talking about metal clad (painted boxes).
And as for leaving burrs on trunking!!! That's the first bad practice to be knocked out of an apprentices head!! and not very proffesional at all! just use a serrated washer, end of.
I'm glad you don't suspend from long screwed rod Engineer54 but not all jobs have the alternative luxury to do a better install.
But I do like the idea of testing conduit with a ductor tester, never seen that before, again possibly down to time/cost factor but then again when installed with lockrings and serrated washers............