can you bend pipe?
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Discuss In your country, do you use pipe to run wire through very much? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
I had a play with that once, didn't like it at all, the pipe entry holes were a bit big and the locking screws are tiny!there is a system available which uses standard steel conduit and the boxes have plain entries with a set screw to secure the conduit, i think it is called conlok.
Regarding you point about rewiring it's always an advantage but in reality there is no way the bigger size T&E we now use can be pulled through. Oval conduit is already user unfriendly for rewires. I also don't think it is necessary to allow for future rewires (unless damaged).
If you pull 2 ends straight off the cable roller (no kinks), you will push them through a horizontal piece of 20mm pipe OK.I doubt the original intention was to provide for future rewiring, but it would be one added benefit in some cases. Obviously not every section of old conduit will serve that purpose, but think of 20mm round conduit dropping to a 1G switch plate - that's going to be easy to pull a cable through if the need arises.
I take it there's no chance of getting two legs of that new Irish T&E through 20mm?
Your a lot younger than I thought, steel conduit drops where all about rewiring, using fabric covered cable needed this facility as the cable insulation deteriorated.I doubt the original intention was to provide for future rewiring, but it would be one added benefit in some cases. Obviously not every section of old conduit will serve that purpose, but think of 20mm round conduit dropping to a 1G switch plate - that's going to be easy to pull a cable through if the need arises.
I've come across quite a lot of both rubber and PVC insulated fabric covered conduit cable here, and it is often in excellent condition! Of course old rubber cables should be replaced as a matter or course...using fabric covered cable needed this facility as the cable insulation deteriorated.
I’d disagree with you steel conduit is used to enable the use of single core cabling to provide a suitable means of protection and also enhance the space of wiring in single core cable you wudn be wiring a new build council office in twin and earth through galv it is single core so I don’t think age is a factor in your postYour a lot younger than I thought, steel conduit drops where all about rewiring, using fabric covered cable needed this facility as the cable insulation deteriorated.
All the drops I have done have gone into steel trunking and required a 90 degree bend sometimes included a set or double or even bubble at worst case lol I suppose different jobs have different specs but my experience with galv is that it’s galv all the wayIt is when you take into account when conduit drops where the normal thing to do, all switch's and sockets where cabled by a steel conduit vertical drop form the roof or floor void above or below, there where never any horizontal or zones, it was just straight drops to the sunken box, but as you say T&E did not exist it was always single core cable.
A man of your experience should know better ?‍never got the hang of that steel conduit stuff. put it on the bender. hit it with a sledgehammer to bend it... it squashed flat.
Who thought that times would change heyTo be said in a broad Yorkshire accent: Eye when I where a lad, who'd of thought I'd be on ere talking about conduit drops in galvanised steel.
Your a lot younger than I thought, steel conduit drops where all about rewiring, using fabric covered cable needed this facility as the cable insulation deteriorated.
You don’t tend to have steel conduit in domestic properties mate, oval pvc conduit or capping is more common, steel conduit is more commercial, industrial although I wudn be surprised if domestic rewires in 10 years time will have to be done in steel conduit with less money that is currently paid for a Rewire is disgraceful the lack of appreciation shown for sparks in most casesI can only comment on that which I've encountered in domestic properties in NI and have very limited experience of this subject.
In my lifetime it was originally oval conduit and latterly round. These have all been one form of plastic or other.
Reply to In your country, do you use pipe to run wire through very much? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net