- Dual-rated mechanical terminal lug for copper or aluminium conductors from 14 AWG to 1/0 AWG, with a 1/4 in stud hole for panel, equipment, and grounding terminations. Tin-plated aluminium body helps reduce contact resistance, and proper conductor prep plus manufacturer torque values should be followed for reliable terminations.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks5 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product page
- Edmonton Stock: 18
Mechanical Lug · 14-6 AWG · 1-Conductor 1-Hole Aluminium Tin-Plated · Techspan LA6
Aluminium mechanical lug for 1 conductor with 1 mounting hole, sized for #14 to #6 AWG conductors depending on strand class and manufacturer listing. Commonly used for terminating copper or aluminium conductors in panels, equipment and grounding or bonding connections where a set-screw lug is required.2 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product page- Edmonton Stock: 8
Mechanical lug · #14 to #2 AWG · aluminium dual-rated 1-conductor 1-hole · Techspan LA2
Aluminium mechanical lug for one copper or aluminium conductor in the #14 to #2 AWG range, with a single mounting hole and tin-plated body for reduced contact resistance. Commonly used for panel, grounding, and equipment terminations where a reusable mechanical connection is preferred.2 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product page- Edmonton Stock: 8
Mechanical Lug · 14 AWG to 1/0 AWG · Aluminium Dual-Rated 1-Conductor 1-Hole · Techspan LA0
Aluminium mechanical lug for terminating one copper or aluminium conductor in the 14 AWG to 1/0 AWG range on a single-bolt connection point. Commonly used in panels, equipment terminations, and grounding or bonding assemblies where a compact 1-hole lug is required.4 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageMechanical Lug · 14 AWG to 2/0 AWG · 1-Conductor 1-Hole Aluminium Dual-Rated · Techspan LA2/0
Aluminium mechanical lug for one conductor with a 14 AWG to 2/0 AWG range and single-hole mounting. Dual-rated for copper or aluminium conductors, with a tin-plated body for lower contact resistance and corrosion protection in typical panel, equipment, and grounding terminations.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse5 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product page- Edmonton Stock: 8
Mechanical Lug · 6 AWG to 250 kcmil · Aluminium 1-Conductor 1-Hole · Techspan LA250
Aluminium mechanical lug for one conductor, sized for 6 AWG to 250 kcmil, with a 1-hole mounting format. Commonly used for panel, equipment and grounding terminations where a mechanical set-screw lug is preferred; verify conductor compatibility, stud size and torque requirements before installation.12 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageAluminium Mechanical Lug · 6 AWG to 350 kcmil · 1 Conductor 1 Hole · Techspan LA350
Aluminium mechanical lug for terminating one copper or aluminium conductor from 6 AWG to 350 kcmil on a one-hole pad. Commonly used in panels, switchgear and equipment terminations where a set-screw lug with a broad wire range is needed.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse19 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageAluminium Mechanical Lug · 1-Conductor, 1-Hole · #4 AWG to 500 kcmil Cu/Al Range · Techspan LA500
Single-conductor aluminium mechanical lug for terminating #4 AWG to 500 kcmil copper or aluminium conductors on a one-hole pad connection. Commonly used in panels, switchgear and equipment terminations where a mechanical set-screw lug with a wide wire range is required.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse30 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageMechanical Lug · 14 AWG to 1/0 AWG · 2-Conductor · 1-Hole Aluminium Dual-Rated · Techspan L2A0
Aluminium mechanical lug for terminating two conductors in a single 1-hole connection point, with a conductor range of 14 AWG to 1/0 AWG. Commonly used for panel, grounding, bonding, and distribution terminations where a compact dual-rated lug is required for copper or aluminium conductors.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse10 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageMechanical Lug · 14 AWG to 2/0 AWG · 2-Conductor 1-Hole Aluminium · Techspan L2A2/0
Aluminium mechanical lug for terminating one or two copper or aluminium conductors from 14 AWG to 2/0 AWG on a single 1-hole mounting point. Commonly used for panel, grounding, bonding, and distribution terminations where a dual-rated mechanical connector is required.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse12 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageMechanical Lug · 6 AWG to 250 kcmil · 2-Conductor 1-Hole Aluminium · Techspan L2A250
Aluminium mechanical lug for terminating two conductors in the 6 AWG to 250 kcmil range on a single mounting point. Commonly used for panel, distribution and equipment terminations where a 2-conductor, 1-hole lug is required; verify conductor compatibility, stud size and torque requirements before installation.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse29 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageMechanical Lug · 6 AWG to 350 kcmil · 2-Conductor 1-Hole Aluminium · Techspan L2A350
Aluminium mechanical lug for terminating two conductors in the 6 AWG to 350 kcmil range on a single mounting point. Commonly used for panel, distribution, and equipment terminations where a dual-conductor, one-hole lug is required; verify conductor material compatibility, mounting hole size, and torque to the manufacturer listing before installation.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse33 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageAluminium Mechanical Lug · 2-Conductor · #2 AWG to 600 kcmil · 1-Hole Mount · Techspan L2A600
Aluminium mechanical lug for terminating two conductors from #2 AWG to 600 kcmil on a single 1-hole pad connection. Commonly used for feeder, distribution, and equipment terminations where a dual-conductor lug is specified; verify conductor compatibility, mounting hole size, and listing requirements before installation.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse60 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageCopper Mechanical Lug · #14 to #6 AWG · 1-Hole Offset Tongue · Techspan SLU35
Copper mechanical lug for terminating one copper conductor from #14 to #6 AWG to equipment pads or bars using a single mounting hole. Commonly used in panels, grounding and bonding, and control equipment where an offset tongue helps with wire routing in tighter spaces.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse4 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageMechanical lug · 14-10 AWG copper conductor range · 1-hole offset tongue · Techspan SLU25
Copper mechanical lug for terminating 14-10 AWG copper conductors to a single mounting point. Commonly used in panels, equipment terminations, and grounding or bonding connections where a compact 1-hole lug with offset tongue is required.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse7 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageCopper Mechanical Lug · 8-2 AWG · 1-Hole Single Collar · Techspan SLU70
Copper mechanical lug for 8-2 AWG copper conductors with a single-collar, 1-hole offset pad design. Commonly used for panel, grounding and equipment terminations where a compact mechanical connection and 1/4 in stud mounting are required.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse7 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageCopper Mechanical Lug · 8 AWG to 1/0 AWG · 1-Hole Offset Tongue · Techspan SLU125
Mechanical copper lug for terminating #8 AWG to 1/0 AWG copper conductors to equipment pads or bus connections using a single mounting hole. Single-collar, offset-tongue design helps with wire routing in tighter terminations; verify conductor class, stud size, and torque requirements before installation.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse15 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageMechanical Lug · 4 AWG to 3/0 AWG Copper · 1-Hole Offset Tongue · Techspan SLU175
Copper mechanical lug for terminating one stranded copper conductor from 4 AWG to 3/0 AWG onto a 3/8 in stud pad. Single-collar, 1-hole offset-tongue design with set-screw clamping is commonly used in panels, equipment pads and bus connections where a field-installed mechanical termination is required.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse22 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageCopper Mechanical Lug · #2 to 4/0 AWG · 1-Hole Single Collar · Techspan SLU225
Copper mechanical lug for terminating one copper conductor from #2 AWG to 4/0 AWG on a 1-hole pad connection. Single-collar, 1-port design with a 5/16 in stud hole, commonly used in panels, equipment terminations, and grounding or bonding connections where a compact mechanical lug is required.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse39 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageCopper Mechanical Lug · 1/0 AWG to 350 kcmil · 1 Conductor 1 Hole · Techspan SLU300
Copper mechanical lug for terminating one copper conductor from 1/0 AWG to 350 kcmil on a single-bolt connection point. Commonly used in panels, switchgear and equipment terminations where a one-hole lug with a 3/8 in stud and copper body is required.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse73 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product pageCopper Mechanical Lug · 4/0 AWG to 500 kcmil · 1-Hole Offset Tongue · Techspan SLU400
Copper mechanical lug for one copper conductor from 4/0 AWG to 500 kcmil, with a 1-hole offset tongue for terminating to equipment pads or bus bars. Commonly used where a mechanical set-screw connection is preferred for service, distribution, or panel work; verify conductor strand class, stud size, and equipment compatibility before ordering.Available to Order | Typically Arrives in 1 - 3 Weeks Ships From Burnaby BC Factory Warehouse131 – Loyalty RewardsClick the image to back order this item from the product page
Quick Decision Summary
- Choose lugs by conductor material, conductor size, termination type, and environment before comparing price.
- Compression lugs are commonly chosen for repeatable terminations on feeders, grounding, and higher-current work.
- Mechanical lugs are often preferred where field flexibility, service changes, or easier replacement matter.
- Verify whether the lug is copper, aluminium, or dual rated, and match it to the conductor and listed installation method.
- Stud size, pad configuration, barrel length, and conductor class all affect fit and termination quality.
- For code compliance and safety, always follow the Canadian Electrical Code, equipment markings, and the lug manufacturer's instructions.
Lugs are the termination point between a conductor and a piece of equipment, bus, grounding point, or splice arrangement. In practice, the right lug is not just about wire size. Electricians and buyers also need to consider conductor material, fine-stranded versus standard building wire, indoor versus corrosive locations, available crimp tooling, and whether the connection may need to be reworked later. For service, distribution, motor, grounding, and control applications, selecting the correct lug helps reduce heat, loosening, corrosion, and nuisance failures over time.
What Are Lugs?
Lugs are connectors used to terminate electrical conductors onto studs, pads, bus bars, equipment terminals, or grounding points. Common types include compression lugs, mechanical lugs, grounding lugs, one-hole and two-hole lugs, and straight or angled configurations. Some are intended for copper conductors only, some for aluminium, and many are dual rated for copper and aluminium conductors when installed as listed. The lug body, barrel design, plating, and fastening method all influence conductivity, corrosion resistance, and long-term connection stability.
Where Are Lugs Used?
Lugs are used across service entrances, panelboards, switchgear, transformers, disconnects, MCCs, generators, grounding systems, battery systems, and industrial equipment. In commercial and industrial work, they are common on feeders, bonding jumpers, motor terminations, and bus connections. In maintenance settings, mechanical lugs are often used for repairs or retrofit work where conductors may need to be removed and reterminated. In grounding and bonding work, listed grounding lugs are used where the connection method and corrosion resistance are important to the installation.
How To Choose Lugs
Start with conductor size and conductor material. Then confirm whether the conductor is standard stranded, compact stranded, solid, or fine stranded, because not every lug is listed for every conductor class. Next, choose the termination style: compression for a permanent crimped connection, or mechanical for set-screw flexibility. Check the number of conductors per lug, stud hole size, tongue width, pad layout, and whether a one-hole or two-hole pattern is needed. For outdoor, washdown, or corrosive areas, look at plating and environmental suitability. If the lug will terminate aluminium conductor, oxide inhibitor requirements and the connector listing should be reviewed carefully. If the connection lands on OEM equipment, always verify the equipment terminal requirements before substituting a different lug style.
Trade Rules Of Thumb
As a typical rule of thumb, compression lugs are often chosen when consistency and vibration resistance matter more than future adjustability. Mechanical lugs are often chosen when serviceability and field changes matter more than having a crimp tool on hand. Two-hole lugs are commonly preferred on equipment pads where rotation must be limited. Long-barrel compression lugs are often selected for flexible cable or where extra crimp area is desired, but the lug must still be listed for that conductor type. In mixed-metal environments, plated or dual-rated connectors are commonly used to reduce corrosion concerns, but matching the listed conductor material remains essential. These are practical buying rules only and do not replace manufacturer instructions or code requirements.
Sizing Guidelines
Lug sizing starts with the exact conductor size, usually in AWG or kcmil, and the exact conductor material. Do not assume a lug that physically accepts a wire is correctly sized. The barrel must match the conductor range listed by the manufacturer, and the tongue must match the stud or bolt size at the equipment. For compression lugs, the correct die index and crimp pattern are part of the listed system, so sizing includes both the lug and the tooling. For mechanical lugs, torque value is part of the connection design and should be followed exactly. Fine-stranded conductors, welding cable, and flexible power cable often require lugs specifically listed for those conductor classes. Where current, fault duty, or equipment approval is critical, use the equipment documentation and connector listing rather than a field guess.
Common Installation Practices
Good installation practice starts with clean conductor preparation and correct strip length so strands are fully inserted without excess exposed copper or aluminium. For compression lugs, installers typically verify conductor size, lug size, die selection, and crimp sequence before making the termination. For mechanical lugs, conductors are inserted fully and tightened to the marked torque using an appropriate torque tool. On aluminium conductors, installers commonly check whether oxide inhibitor is required by the connector or equipment instructions. On pad lugs, the contact surface should be clean and hardware tightened to the specified value. After termination, many crews inspect for full insertion, proper crimp marks or set-screw engagement, and any signs of strand damage. Installation methods must follow the connector listing, equipment labelling, and applicable Canadian code requirements.
Common Mistakes
Common mistakes include mixing copper-only lugs with aluminium conductors, using a lug that is not listed for fine-stranded cable, guessing at stud size, and substituting a one-hole lug where a two-hole pad is needed for stability. Another frequent issue is using the wrong crimp die or an unapproved tool with compression lugs, which can create a connection that looks acceptable but is not installed as listed. Under-torquing and over-torquing mechanical lugs are also common problems. In retrofit work, buyers sometimes focus only on conductor size and miss barrel orientation, tongue width, or enclosure clearance. Corrosion exposure, vibration, and future maintenance access should also be considered before choosing a lug style.
Brand Comparisons
Lug selection is often driven more by listing, fit, and tooling compatibility than by brand alone. In many projects, matching the installed connector system or the approved crimp tooling already on site is the practical choice. Some brands are commonly preferred where contractors already own matching dies and hydraulic tools, while others are chosen for availability, grounding options, or value on standard mechanical terminations. For maintenance departments, staying with a familiar lug family can reduce installation errors and simplify stocking. For new work, a comparable listed alternative may be suitable if conductor class, material rating, stud pattern, and tooling requirements all align. The right comparison is usually system compatibility first, then price and availability.
Related Products
Products commonly purchased with lugs include heat shrink tubing, phase tape, grounding hardware, bonding jumpers, anti-oxidant compounds where required, compression tools, dies, torque tools, bus hardware, terminal blocks, and cable management products. Depending on the job, buyers may also look at splice kits, mechanical connectors, grounding clamps, distribution blocks, and insulated covers for exposed terminations. When ordering lugs for a shutdown or service call, it is often worth confirming hardware size, tooling availability, and any required accessories at the same time.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a compression lug and a mechanical lug?
A compression lug is crimped onto the conductor using a listed tool and die combination, creating a permanent termination. A mechanical lug uses one or more screws to clamp the conductor and is often easier to install, remove, or rework in the field.
Can I use the same lug for copper and aluminium wire?
Only if the lug is specifically listed and marked for both conductor materials. Dual-rated lugs are common, but copper-only and aluminium-specific connectors also exist. Always verify the connector marking and installation instructions.
Do I need a special lug for fine-stranded cable?
Often, yes. Fine-stranded and flexible conductors may require lugs specifically listed for that conductor class. A standard lug for building wire may not be acceptable even if the cable seems to fit physically.
When should I choose a two-hole lug?
Two-hole lugs are commonly used where the equipment pad is drilled for two bolts and where resistance to rotation matters. They are often preferred on higher-current terminations, vibrating equipment, or applications where alignment stability is important.
Are mechanical lugs acceptable for grounding and bonding?
They can be, provided the lug is specifically listed for grounding or bonding use and installed in accordance with its instructions and the applicable code requirements. Not every general-purpose mechanical lug is suitable for every grounding application.
Why does stud size matter when ordering lugs?
The tongue hole must match the equipment stud or bolt size. If the hole is too small, the lug will not fit. If the pad geometry is wrong, the connection may not seat properly or may interfere with adjacent hardware.
Can I crimp a compression lug with any hydraulic crimper?
No. Many compression systems rely on a specific listed lug, die, and tool combination. Using an unapproved crimper or the wrong die can affect compliance and connection quality, even if the crimp appears tight.






















