Trailer wiring

   / Trailer wiring #11  
As a side note—if you want to keep rodents from nibbling on the wiring of outdoor equipment, we’ve had good luck with mint-based spray repellents. You can usually find them at TSC, Lowe’s, and most hardware stores.
 
   / Trailer wiring
  • Thread Starter
#12  
As a side note—if you want to keep rodents from nibbling on the wiring of outdoor equipment, we’ve had good luck with mint-based spray repellents. You can usually find them at TSC, Lowe’s, and most hardware stores.
We use cats to keep tabs on the rats and mice. I have no interest in repelling vermin.
 
   / Trailer wiring
  • Thread Starter
#13  
Thanks all.

Yes, the trailer does most of its work around the farm. (Off road) PVC sounds like a good option.

We make a few trips a year inside 40 miles to get materials or haul a piece of equipment.
 
   / Trailer wiring #14  
If you have never used WAGO connectors look them up on YouTube or Amazon.

More expensive than wire connectors but I prefer them over wire nuts.
 
   / Trailer wiring #15  
If you have never used WAGO connectors look them up on YouTube or Amazon.

More expensive than wire connectors but I prefer them over wire nuts.

I like those for connecting light fixtures with small gauge stranded wires to 12 or 14 gauge solid wires but i would use them for trailer wiring. A simple crimp cap is cheap and about as reliable as it gets besides soldering.
 
   / Trailer wiring #16  
I did get a box of assorted WAGO connectors and I thought they were a pretty good idea, and better than wire nuts, which I have never been a particular fan of anyway.

Turns out you shouldn't use them on aluminum wire (different coefficient of expansion, and if your home has aluminum wire, you have bigger problems than using wire nuts) and they don't work well on stranded wire because the strands "squish" unpredictably when the WAGO closes.

They are really for solid copper wire.

I stopped using them when one of them caught fire (!) on power-up, and several of them didn't grip the wire properly and the wire slipped out of the connector. (Don'tcha just love the idea of bare, live wires flopping around inside metal junction boxes?)

I do use them for low or no power connections like speaker wires, and on breadboards for temporary projects. I won't use them on AC power lines, I simply don't trust them. I know they are NEC approved, but I will continue to splice and connect wires with a) wire nuts, b) crimp caps and splices done with a proper ratcheting crimper, or c) soldering for anything permanent, as appropriate.

Best Regards,
Mike/Florida
 

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