Custom Junction Boxes
Custom junction boxes with organized terminal blocks, labeling, cable-entry planning, and enclosure options for industrial field wiring.
Request a QuoteOrganized Field Wiring Starts at the Box
A junction box is useful when it makes field wiring easier to land, inspect, and service. We confirm circuit counts, wire sizes, cable entry, environment, labeling conventions, and spare terminal needs before building the layout.
Specifications
- Terminal Blocks: Labeled terminals selected around field wiring and circuit needs
- Enclosure: NEMA 4 steel option; stainless, polycarbonate, and other needs reviewed per project
- Cable Entry: Knockouts, gland plates, conduit hubs, or customer-specified entry planning
- Wiring: Pre-wired or terminal-only builds quoted by scope
- Labels: Terminal, device, and customer tag labeling available
- Documentation: Terminal schedules, layout notes, or wiring references quoted when required
Common Configuration Questions
The right junction box depends on the wiring, not just the enclosure size.
Terminal Count and Type
Circuit count, wire gauge, fused terminals, grounding, shields, spares, and separation needs.
Entry and Mounting
Top, bottom, side, gland plate, conduit hub, or customer-directed entry locations.
Labels and Documentation
Terminal numbering, device tags, customer naming conventions, and terminal schedules.
What Buyers Should Confirm
Good Fit
- Field wiring that needs clear terminal organization instead of loose splices or hard-to-service terminations.
- Equipment packages that need a clean interface between field devices and a control panel.
- Retrofits where labeling, spare terminals, or cable entry planning will reduce future service time.
Typical Deliverables
- Junction box assembled to the quoted enclosure, terminal, and entry layout.
- Labeled terminals and device tags based on the agreed naming convention.
- Optional pre-wiring, jumpers, grounding terminals, or spare terminal capacity when specified.
- Terminal schedule, layout reference, or wiring notes when included in scope.
Quote Inputs
- Wire count, wire gauge, circuit voltage, grounding, shielding, and separation requirements.
- Preferred enclosure material, mounting location, and environmental exposure.
- Cable or conduit entry locations, gland plate needs, and service clearance limits.
- Labeling convention, customer tag list, and any inspection or documentation requirements.
Send the wire count, terminal needs, enclosure environment, entry preferences, and any labeling or documentation standards.
Design Your Junction Box