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davesparks
Having watched the above video, but not having seen them in the flesh I can think of a few questions I would want answered before considering using them.
How do you get the cables out again?
How precise do you have to be in the stripped length of the conductors?
If the conductors are slightly too short and don't make a proper connection is this obvious from the outside?
How do you access the terminals for testing, fault finding, safe isolation?
Is there a version for a standard two way or are you restricted to the switch conversion method?
What size conductors does it work with?
Personally I don't favour things like this as they are restricted to a specific purpose, I would rather have a single joint enclosure which I can use with my choice of connectors to fulfill a range of jobs rather than a range of joint boxes each tailored to a specific purpose.
I also think that if you are pricing jobs so tightly that you have to count the seconds it takes to fit a joint box then you're doing it wrong.
How do you get the cables out again?
How precise do you have to be in the stripped length of the conductors?
If the conductors are slightly too short and don't make a proper connection is this obvious from the outside?
How do you access the terminals for testing, fault finding, safe isolation?
Is there a version for a standard two way or are you restricted to the switch conversion method?
What size conductors does it work with?
Personally I don't favour things like this as they are restricted to a specific purpose, I would rather have a single joint enclosure which I can use with my choice of connectors to fulfill a range of jobs rather than a range of joint boxes each tailored to a specific purpose.
I also think that if you are pricing jobs so tightly that you have to count the seconds it takes to fit a joint box then you're doing it wrong.