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I'm no electrician, but I would be very wary of using something like the XT/MT/MR connectors with their close-mounted, uninsulated terminals for AC power inputs. I saw the MR30 was rated for 500V, but I still don't think I'd trust it. A single layer of heatshrink isn't much of a match for mains voltage AC, and if that heatshrink gets damaged or pulled off ...Oh, I just took a look at the LP-12s [USER=431]@BaK[/USER] linked, and they're rated for 125V ... That's a no-go, even for 110VAC - peak-to-peak voltage in a 110V AC circuit is far above 125V after all, let alone what it would see in case of a power surge or similar. Seems like most of these connectors are designed solely for low-voltage DC applications.
I'm no electrician, but I would be very wary of using something like the XT/MT/MR connectors with their close-mounted, uninsulated terminals for AC power inputs. I saw the MR30 was rated for 500V, but I still don't think I'd trust it. A single layer of heatshrink isn't much of a match for mains voltage AC, and if that heatshrink gets damaged or pulled off ...
Oh, I just took a look at the LP-12s [USER=431]@BaK[/USER] linked, and they're rated for 125V ... That's a no-go, even for 110VAC - peak-to-peak voltage in a 110V AC circuit is far above 125V after all, let alone what it would see in case of a power surge or similar. Seems like most of these connectors are designed solely for low-voltage DC applications.