The twisting is in fact part of the electrical connection. On a good wire nut connection the wire nut is just insulating the bundle and if it falls off the bundle is still secure.
> On a good wire nut connection the wire nut is just insulating the bundle and if it falls off the bundle is still secure.
The problem is, a good wire nut is impossible to distinguish from a bad wire nut. A transparent Wago (or its clones) are virtually foolproof to install and to inspect.
No. If you use a good wire nut (i.e. use a good brand, have experience, and never reuse a wire nut), the nut itself makes the electrical connection. A good wire nut application will never fall off. If it does, you didn't attach it right. I concede this is a function of experience and it's not foolproof.
All that having been said, I still pre-twist because it helps keep the wires together which makes it easier to put the nut on in the first place -- especially if you're connecting more than two wires.
Edit: One point I left out is that if you don't pre-twist, correct attachment means you should put the nut on with enough tension that the nut itself causes the wires to twist together. This hurts your fingers if you do it all day, so using a wire nut twisting tool is recommended.
You need to twist or otherwise adhere wires together before soldering them, e.g. when using heat shrink solder sleeve, unless you've some other way to hold the wires in place.
There's places where you can substitute wago, but often not, e.g. when working with limited space, e.g. repairing a broken wire harness in a car, or similar.
> There's places where you can substitute wago, but often not, e.g. when working with limited space, e.g. repairing a broken wire harness in a car, or similar.
Don't fear! The wago inline splicing connector is here!
I knew about that, actually. It's way too big still for some uses, and I'm guessing won't deal well with anything that repeatedly lightly pulls on the wire (e.g. a trunk hinge). But for some other cases it's great.
The two randos were just given a list of names to fire for "performance reasons".
They were probably also being evaluated by how many people per day they let go.
Nobody, even those two, believes that she had a bad performance either.
Sad situation to be in.
I feel you.. I have it the same.
I personally resigned on trying to solve this issue. What I am doing instead is, to have this procrastination be productive. When watching youtube, I go see coding videos, or survival. Or instead of music I go listen to Python podcasts to keep in loop on new features. Or I go solve some leetcode problems. Heck I even do chores around the house. Therefore, I know that I should be doing work stuff, but at least I am not wasting time.
If you don't want those (SO) answers, you can always go looking at w3schools (or other pseudo tech sites) or indian/pakistani facebook groups. Good luck there.
SO is, an always been the go to for devs that want answers to specific issue.
Maybe you should ask better questions to get better answers.
But to answer your question.
- if there are better forums or sources to get answers, than SO, we would know by now
And a followup for others. Have you as well seen a decline in the "questions" quality, rather than the answers? I'm worried, our industry is being polluted.