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Aluminum Wire Website
Aluminum Wiring Repair-
-Methods - CPSC Meeting 9/28/95
  Contents
  Copper Pigtailing
  Pigtailing failures
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Slide 27 overheating aluminum wire twist on connector failure photo Aluminum Wire: Copper to Aluminum Splice Deterioration Process and Consequence

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  • Aluminum wire failure mechanisms
  • Why twist-on connectors overheat and lead to failures when used for copper to aluminum pigtailing
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This page continues the explanation of why twist-on connectors overheat and lead to failures when used for copper to aluminum pigtailing as an attempt at aluminum wiring repair. The observation explained here is that with this type of aluminum to copper wire splice, resistance increases between the copper and aluminum wires, leading to overheating of the connection and the twist-on the connector. This is Aluminum Wiring Repair Procedure - Page 8 Color photos and descriptive captions from CPSC Meeting 9/28/95. In this document aluminum wire twist-on connector failures and repair procedures are described, including aluminum wire repair methods which work and methods which do not work and are unsafe. Color photos of aluminum wire repair procedures, and photos of failed connectors are included. This document describes hazards with existing products, explains the aluminum wiring failure mechanism, and reviews recommended retrofit procedures including use of readily-available materials. This information was presented to the US Consumer Product Safety Commission by Dr. J. Aronstein, 9/28/95. The minutes of that meeting were obtained under the Freedom of Information Act and posted by Daniel Friedman January 1996.
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Slide 25 25. As the aluminum-wired twist-on splices age, the wire-to-wire contact increases in resistance and may finally open altogether. The many wire-to-spring contacts also deteriorate (increase resistance) and some may also open completely, as shown in this equivalent circuit.




Slide 26 26. The deterioration process is observed experimentally as a slow but progressive increase in resistance, as the various current paths within the splice degrade. There are less parallel paths active through the spring, and the result can be a red-hot spring when current flows.




Slide 27 27. That is exactly what has happened here. All of the current is passing through only a few segments of the spring and those parts of the spring become red hot.

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The CPSC Recommendation against the use of twist-on connectors for aluminum wire is soundly based. There is no reason to believe that the Ideal #65 connector, recently UL listed for aluminum-to-copper combinations, overcomes the fundamental deficiencies of this type of connection for applications with aluminum wire.
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The Ideal #65 connector has a zinc-plated steel spring. A combination known to be bad in contact with aluminum. Containing a free-burning oxide inhibitor grease, and having a free-burning thermoplastic shell, the connector can ignite readily if failures of the types shown here occur.

The only justification given for marketing this connector as suitable for aluminum wiring is that it has passed the test requirements of UL486C.

That the tests of UL486C are insufficient can be understood by considering the following table. [Table is on next page.]
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05/02/2006 Created 1/31/96 -- www.inspect-ny.com/aluminum/pl2p8.htm -- Web page design & content © Copyright 2008-1996 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved