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Nice to see him go round with a torque screwdriver after...

Discuss Nice to see him go round with a torque screwdriver after... in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Does not look like a torque screwdriver to me? or was that a tongue in cheek comment in the title?

bit of both :)

i recognised it was a regular screwdriver , but at least he used his experience to double check the connections The Ole fashion way (the best way Imo)

so many times I have seen guys do a board using an impact driver and just whack the lid straight on without checking the connections
 
Not just that, it sett my ocd into hyperdrive when he just stuck his new wooden panel over the old panel without removing all the old wiring first.
I would have removed every bit of old before mounting my new wooden panel...even if it took an extra 25 minutes to do so
 
Shame his main earth didn't come through the same opening as the tails.
I wonder why the pyros were redundant, what a shame.
He's quick but doesn't impress me at all.
Couldn't be bothered to watch all but also didn't see any single conductors doubled over.

is he really that quick? , most experienced sparks could make off a consumer unit in sub 2 hours if you do absolutely 0 testing of anything and absolutely no labelling etc
I reckon I could change my board in my house in under 40 minutes (it is only 4 circuits and the tester will stay in the van...
 
I would never use a impact driver anywhere near a cu, call me old fashioned but it would be with my hand and good old manual screwdriver.

Cutting away those MICC cables was emotional for me. lol
Agree, in fact some CU manufacturers specifically say do not do it. I guess they have had too many returns due to stripped threads!
 
Agree, in fact some CU manufacturers specifically say do not do it. I guess they have had too many returns due to stripped threads!
I’m often tempted to slacken off all the screws with my 18v impact , but certainly won’t use it to tighten down the screws.
by hand is the only way for me , you can feel the terminal bite down and then I know it’s correct, with an impact gun you would have absolutely no feel...
 
A "lightweight" electric screwdriver may be fine, or a drill-driver on very low setting, but tightening by hand is preferable IMHO.
As for an impact driver, that is totally the wrong tool. It is designed and operates in a specific way for specific jobs requiring tons well, netwon metres, of torque and is not designed for making electrical terminations in CUs and accessories. However, it seems that a sector of the trades believe it is de riguer to use one for everything...the clue's in the name...
I watched 2 guys boarding out a plasterboard ceiling using them...totally unnecessary and very noisy, apart from being less easy to regulate the depth.
 

Reply to Nice to see him go round with a torque screwdriver after... in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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