I had to use heat-shrink tubing on the crumbling BX when I was replacing the dodgy wall switch in the bathroom in my new apartment two years ago.
A simple 10 minute excersise turned into a "run to Radio Shack on a late Sunday afternoon for a pack of heatshrink" and PRAY that the insulation didn't continue crumbling up into the BX's armor!!
Oh...did I also mention that the rotten box had broken off the stud and was hanging inside the wall? The device cover is the only thing holding the entire thing in place against the wall!!!!
The luminaire in the bedroom is just a rubber pigtail socket because I heard the tell-tale "crunch" when I pulled down the old 60-watt fixture (with two 100-watt bulbs) and dug out the CHARRED fiberglass insulation that had been shoved up into the box!
I didn't move the insulation much so I none of the insulation crumbled.
Bathroom and bedroom lights and one outlet in bedroom are on the same 15 amp circuit....of course this is a 1950s apartment building.
My guess is the circuit was overfused at one point...because the wall socket in the bedroom on that same circuit also had the cruncy insulation (heatshrink on that one too). Thank god for circuit breakers!!!
When I saw some of the scrapped fuse-holders from the other apartments in the garbage the day the electricians put in the breakers, I saw 30 and 20 amp Edison fuses in these things.
I'll be tearing this stuff out in the very near future...
[This message has been edited by SvenNYC (edited 05-05-2003).]