Conduit Adapters

DJM

Joined
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Purely out of interest, and I'm probably being slow, but why are there male and female conduit adapters? They both appear to perform the same function.
 
But in different ways..

Males slip inside females, females go over the outside of males.

I'm sure you must have encountered the concept in other contexts....
 
Indeed BAN I understand the concept, but in the context of conduit, I can't quite see why both types are needed.
 
females have a bush that is inserted into the adapter through whatever you're attaching, this means that there is only a small bit inside the item, leaving room for cables etc.. also means that you can fit conduit to a fixed item with no need for extra room..

males have the thread on the adapter and a locknut for inside..
this means that you can screw the conduit into something that already contains a thread such as a beezer box.. ( you don't get male adapters for steel conduits, only plastic ).
MT20MAB.JPG
screw into things like these
CO20BX2.JPG
or things like these
WK308B.JPG
with built in threads etc..
 
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BESA! It refferes to the set distance of the fixing holes. The 'besa standard'.

I prefer to always use female (the bushed). I use male when entering threaded holes.
 
Are there even specific adaptors for steel conduit or do you just screw a bush into a coupler?
 
oh, ok.. I've never seen it written down, only heard it said so I had no idea how to spell it.


and plug, yes you fit a coupler and use a brass bush.

you can use 2 locknuts and a female bush on the threaded conduit.
 

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