Discuss Torque Talk in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Well it is. Very confusing. Read my post of a few minutes ago. In summary, "taking account of" does not mean "must be complied with" and also instructions are generally crap....hence the confusion.

I think I'm missing your point here.

We should take account of manufacturer's instructions, but not necessarily rigidly follow them.

That's straightforward to me. Look at them, but if they are incorrect, badly translated, or geared towards another country's electrical system then adapt as appropriate. A competent electrician will be able to do this.

Let me know if I've missed something
 
I think I'm missing your point here.

We should take account of manufacturer's instructions, but not necessarily rigidly follow them.

That's straightforward to me. Look at them, but if they are incorrect, badly translated, or geared towards another country's electrical system then adapt as appropriate. A competent electrician will be able to do this.

Let me know if I've missed something
You are missing the OP's opening gambit - asking if Torque screwdrivers are mandated....and think it is fair to say that they are not !
 
The manufacturers' instructions have to allow for the situation where a newly qualified installer wishes to fit their component to the highest standard. It might be the first real installation work in their career, with very little experience to guide them on how terminals behave. By providing torque figures the manufacturers can help ensure them achieve a good installation and begin to learn what is appropriate for each of 101 different types of terminal, based on factory tested torques instead of guesswork.

An experienced installer whose approach combines craftsmanship and engineering, takes the time to examine and test their finished work and that of others, reads up on how devices are made, analyses failures etc. might have as good an idea of the appropriate torque as the manufacturers themselves. They will account for factors that are excluded from the sterile lab environment in which the published figures are devised and fine tune according to variables that cannot be included in a one-figure-fits-all torque setting printed on the side of an MCB.

I am interested to know the correct torque and will test it to decide whether I think it is appropriate. Sometimes, as mentioned above, I find recommended torques somewhat low. I trust my own judgement and would happily defend a departure from the published figure because I consider myself sufficiently competent in the craft and science of termination, and believe I could demonstrate that competence if required.
 
Here's an example... tyre fitters.

They run up the wheel nuts on your very expensive alloy wheels... Then finish them with a torque wrench, set at the correct value.
This ensures that its not too loose, that the vibration of driving loosens them more, and they fall out... nor too tight, as they would damage your alloys.

Its the same type of forces on the screw terminals within a consumer unit. Not too loose, not too tight...You dont want the cable wiggling out... nor do you want the circuit breaker cracking apart because someone turned the driver too much.
Luckily the manufacturers helpfully give you the optimum values.

I would rather see a tyre fitter use a torque wrench on my wheels, that im going to drive away in.... rather than him doing it by 'feel' alone.... using a manual wrench, and him saying "Aye, that'll do"



Don't tell me.... you change your own tyres.....
As we tend to say around here: Get a professional to do it!
 
I think both arguments carry some weight.
Fitting to the specified torque will avoid damage and usually provide an adequate connection and peace of mind.
However I'm a firm opponent to the general erosion of common sense and responsibility, and I'd want any sparks to be happy they had made a good connection too. Sometimes, especially with larger conductors, the recommended torque doesn't feel quite enough.

Don't tell me.... you change your own tyres.....
Actually I used to, and I had a torque wrench and hosted a wheel balancing machine that various like minded folk were free to use any time. (Citroen BX owners used to struggle to get big-name firms to change their tyres as the engine needed to be kept running to keep the suspension up and health and safety didn't allow this when on a ramp. )
However I'm regularly told by my wife and children that I'm abnormal so I'm probably not a good case study.
 
It's a bit like plumbing, you get a feel for it.

I use the same method, tighten up gently making sure no cross threading is taking place, then give it another tweak, and a final tweak before fixing in place.

Usually the third tweak produces nothing in the tightening procedure but gives peace of mind.

I wouldn't trust torque screwdrivers, you might think it's tight because it's torqued to the correct reading, but everything can be faulty.

Good old fashioned feeling can never be wrong, unless you get arthritis.
 

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