View Full Version : What Is This?
Metal Head
29th January 2007, 10:11 PM
Hi,
Is this what they call a junction box in the electrical trade?. If so (or not) what is the purpose of the box (in the image) please?.
Cheers
David
doug1
29th January 2007, 10:18 PM
Yes that is a junction box
for a lighting circuit if the label is correct
Doug
Abug
29th January 2007, 10:20 PM
Yes this is a Junction Box.
It is used for terminating and linking cables while providing a safe cover so people don't touch any live wires.
savage
29th January 2007, 11:18 PM
Yes this is a Junction Box.
It is used for terminating and linking cables while providing a safe cover so people don't touch any live wires.
While renovating a bathroom in our other house, when I was about to start removing the ceiling I climbed up the ladder and placed my hands into the hole I had made so I could start removing it. To my horror, some "nut job" had done some electrical work and NOT used a box to protect the joins and I put my hand right onto the wires and got a hell of a belt, thankfully I was wearing rubber soled shoes.
OBBob
30th January 2007, 07:35 AM
Savage ... you are lucky bacease often it is actually the fall off the ladder rather than the belt that ends up doing the most damage.
Iain
30th January 2007, 07:47 AM
I thought a junction box was a device used by incompetent electricians who cannot measure the right length of cable but need an excuse to charge for another part plus labour.
What I have seen is electricians twisting coax together rather than use a splitter, bit like Eric's experience but it doesn't bite, just don't expect spectacular TV reception.
Redgy
30th January 2007, 02:31 PM
I thought a junction box was a device used by incompetent electricians who cannot measure the right length of cable but need an excuse to charge for another part plus labour.
A bit harsh Iain, I think you'll find even the most competent sparkys use J-boxes. I can see plenty of situations where using a JB and a short run to a new light or gpo would be cheaper than running a whole new cable both in labour and parts.
Reg
Iain
30th January 2007, 07:11 PM
incompetent electricians
thatirwinfella
30th January 2007, 08:28 PM
I think you'll find even the most competent sparkys use J-boxes.
^BL|TZ^
17th February 2007, 02:06 AM
Well I learnt in my trade that on wiring new houses, a number of j boxes are needed thoughout the house because it is just not possible both physically and financially to run a continuous cable on each circuit to pick up every point.
On additions to existing houses you just take the new cable back to the nearest jbox on the the circuit you require.
OBBob
19th February 2007, 07:26 AM
I can understand that, however that raises another question I have always had ... which is, how do you then know (in an old house with a few renos over the years) that the circuit you pick up isn't overloaded?
There are many posts about how many GPOs can be hung on each etc. ... but then down the the track we just tap into the j-box.
Markw
27th February 2007, 03:18 PM
I can understand that, however that raises another question I have always had ... which is, how do you then know (in an old house with a few renos over the years) that the circuit you pick up isn't overloaded?
You turn the circuit off at the switchbox and count the number of things that don't work :)