It is not good idea. First the insulation of the individual wires from a cable may use different material and design (thickness,...) than the one used on single wires designed to be used in a conduit. So it may lack some environment resistance: Could be more ghygroscopic, may lack the overload heat sinking capability (gaps between the wires in a cable used to be filled by a sort of goo, which is able to take quite a lot of surge heat energy by melting itself, so keeping the conductors safe mainly in the short circuit overcurrent faults, individual wires need this robustness in the wire insulation alone). And even when some cables could be assembled using the same wires as designed for bare use, stripping the cable may damage the insulation or the conductor (fatigue stresses, work hardening and consequent brittleness,...). As a result you are more likely to get problems, include fire hazards or so.
The missing labeling is then just a minimal problem compare to others. But it is a tell-tale sign, so sought after by inspectors (among others, like characteristic stripping scratches,...).
And by the way: If the paper layer was wet, so will be the insulation plastic. It may not seem so, but most plastics likes to be quite hygroscopic, unless really explicitely treated by quite expensive additives to not be. The humidity may not seem obvious, but e.g. with PVC it tends to trigger the release of the chlorine, causing severe metal corrosion in quite a short while. So use only the section that was dry and as a complete cable. Assuming the cable was rated for wet environment (and the water gog in only from its unprotected ends).
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« Last Edit: May 25, 2020, 03:26:55 AM by Medved »
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