Stus-List marinco 6079 installation

2018-01-29 Thread Alex Giannelia via CnC-List
Lee, Thanks for all those good notes. I now understand it really isn't necessary if the plywood provides enough support for the 4 screws holding the ears of the duplex outlet and I can pretty well do it as I want. Thanks again, Alex Giannelia C&C 35-II (1974) no 282 a...@airsensing.com _

Stus-List marinco 6079 installation

2018-01-28 Thread Alex Giannelia via CnC-List
epair (Northeast USA) (Chuck S) -- Message: 1 Date: Sun, 28 Jan 2018 02:36:11 + From: Alex Giannelia To: "cnc-list@cnc-list.com" Subject: Stus-List marinco 6079 installation Message-ID: <48a9c22e23244d0e832b4c5836e26b70@S05-MBX03-17.S

Re: Stus-List marinco 6079 installation

2018-01-28 Thread Lee Youngblood via CnC-List
Hi Alex, We used a lot of those “remodel boxes” when I worked as an electrian. They will rust up good on you, and were designed for drywall. If your wall is to thick to use the back flange, just use metal shears, and cut them down. Not actually an easy job, a dremel cutter wheel might work e

Re: Stus-List marinco 6079 installation

2018-01-27 Thread G Collins via CnC-List
Hi Alex Those are to make it easier to install in an existing structure - you can get the same thing for use in renovating a house. The metal piece on the back is intended to hold it into a hole. If you make a cutout the size of the box you can fit it in, the flanges on the front stop it from

Stus-List marinco 6079 installation

2018-01-27 Thread Alex Giannelia via CnC-List
I am re-wiring my boat and bought some Marinco plastic outlet boxes (P/N 6079) that were delivered with a metal guard that screws into the base and has flanges that are too long to come out flush. Are these necessary and how do you install so you can get maximum benefit and are able to install