Anti-shorts work just fine. Tuck it into the cable, pop the cable in, and you're done. The connector bushing protects the wires from the connector itself but not from the armor.
It's perfect for terminating MC/AC cable to a plugmold strip on a kitchen cabinet. The required hole in the cabinet is smaller, and you can terminate the cable easily after installing the plugmold strip. Makes a big difference!
The three tangs engage the spiral armor. Twist counterclockwise to pull the connector off the cable. If a tang gets caught, poke a screwdriver in the back to help release. They aren't hard to remove.
Do u don need the anti short bushing?
where is the anti-short? what is protecting the wires from the metal casing digging into the wires?
looks like the plastic bushing is integral to the connector
Anti-short bushings are not required for use with type mc cable however type AC cable is required to have a Anti-short bushing, as per the NEC
Anti-shorts work just fine. Tuck it into the cable, pop the cable in, and you're done. The connector bushing protects the wires from the connector itself but not from the armor.
WhoTF has been asking for this??
It's perfect for terminating MC/AC cable to a plugmold strip on a kitchen cabinet. The required hole in the cabinet is smaller, and you can terminate the cable easily after installing the plugmold strip. Makes a big difference!
How do you remove?
These snap-in connectors are not designed to be removed: one time use.
The three tangs engage the spiral armor. Twist counterclockwise to pull the connector off the cable. If a tang gets caught, poke a screwdriver in the back to help release. They aren't hard to remove.