Wiring practices
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Wire nuts, leaving extra copper, leaving extra wire.
- If exposed to physical damage, a wire should be protected by some type of conduit or should be relocated. Physical damage can result from contact from persons, animals or the enviroment.
- All wires should have extra length left in junction boxes or at any point where a connection is made. This serves many important purposes:
- To prevent damage from the accidental contact with a person that may move the wire. An overly tight wire exposed to tension may immediately break free from its connection and cause a fault or fire.
- To allow for expansion and contraction of wire and conduit resulting from heating and cooling.
- To provide extra wire that enables safe working conditions in the future.
- All connections made with wire should be done with some kind of mechanical connection, like a wirenut, busbar or PV module connector. Connections performed solely with electrical tape - as is common practice in many parts of the world - are far more likely to fail and cause issues.
- All wires that are entering a connection (busbar, should leave some copper exposed to ensure that insulation is not entering the connection. Insulation in a connection can create resistance, heat and ultimately a fire.
- Labeling wires at all connections.