Originally Posted by
thrasher
We stopped using a spiking tool over 15 years ago. We spiked a cable once then cut out a portion to take back to the lab for analysis of the fault. The spike hole happened to be in the piece cutoff. In the lab we could see where the spike went right past the conductor and never touched it. This was 220 mil TR-XLP over 1/0 solid aluminum. The spike actually missed to the side of the conductor.
Since then we use a grounded hot cutter. The cutter head is eight feet away from your hands and there is a 2/0 copper ground to the jaws. With this set-up I KNOW the cable is dead when I cut it.
Only time in my experience Ive seen the spike miss the conductor was when the wrong tool was used I.E. too large a cable spear for the cable size.....
"It is not the critic who counts:The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena" Teddy Roosevelt