526.8In my work which is mostly commercial controls the biggest fault BY FAR is failures where stranded wire has burnt out due to not enough strands being clamped. in domestic switches and sockets with a grub screw through a tubular hole if the wires are not twisted some of the strands can end up beside the screw and therefore not clamped and thats another maintenance visit.
I'd worked out what words you meant to type.Regs or not.
Faults = fire hazard = unhappy customers.
No faults = happy customers = living customers
QED
Not really, in the context of this exchange:Hope that makes more sense
In my work which is mostly commercial controls the biggest fault BY FAR is failures where stranded wire has burnt out due to not enough strands being clamped. in domestic switches and sockets with a grub screw through a tubular hole if the wires are not twisted some of the strands can end up beside the screw and therefore not clamped and thats another maintenance visit.
526.8
Regs or not.
Faults = fire hazard = unhappy customers.
No faults = happy customers = living customers
QED

All the sockets I have used (even volex!) will take 2no. 4.0mm² conductors

in comercial controlls, every single stranded wire connection should have a ferrule on it or suitable crimp connector..
if you have to get 2 wires into one terminal there are twin ferrules that are designed to take 2 wires..
fine wires that should have been properly terminated? I suppoose a bootlace ferrule or something? but what are they doing in domestic sockets?
domestic stranded must be flex, unless you mean 1960's stranded imperial cable...stranded wire has burnt out due to not enough strands being clamped. in domestic switches and sockets
But what are they doing putting flex into sockets and switches?
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