0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.
6 taps? Hmm... not that I know of in the 221 lever tap line. Wago has a 6-tap in their 773 push-in line that Menards carries (for #14-18), but Menards doesn't carry any of the 221 models, they have the older 222 "lever nut" I mentioned. However, the 222 model is rated for #12 thru #28 (!!!), so if you were seriously mixing wire sizes you'd probably want the earlier type.
Thanks Mike, these are cool! I'll give them a try; hate the WWII era terminal strips or euros😬What kind of "gray tape" do you use to mount them? Needs to stay put, right?Great stuff one learns here!Otto
"Gray tape" may also refer to 3M VHB (Very High Bond) tape. Pretty costly (like $50+ per roll, IIRC), but it's also the most powerful stuff out there. Auto manufacturers use it to attach trim to body panels and other assembly.
That grey outdoor double sided tape is the bees knees. Used it for 15+ years for mounting pedals on pedalboards and can pick up a 20+lb board by any individual pedal. Use them for mounting wiring tie points and they are bomb proof.
I'll have to try this. My pedals are zip-tied through holes in my board. But they slide around a bit...
Thank you, Ed! Yes, this is railroading turned up to '11'. Now dial the clock back 50 years, and the power is going to be DDs, U50s, GTEL8500s plus a dog's breakfast of you-name-it 2nd-generation goodness. While it was fully triple-tracked only in the '70s, that project was mostly a matter of joining the unusual center sidings characteristic of the line. Even back then there was rarely a moment where there wasn't yet another headlight on the horizon.I haven't been to Kearney (CAR-knee and not KEAR-knee!) in over six years, so haven't experienced that fixed automatic horn yet. Awful.
... I always assumed that stuff only ran west of North Platte, ...