Crimping tools

Matata

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I'm replacing 35mm battery leads and plan to do some occasional crimping else where. i've seen hydraulic crimping tools on e bay. They come with a series of tools to crimp various sizes. Another design is the giant plier lever type. Has anyone any suggestions or advise. Regards and a happy Christmas Nic
 
Hi Nic
I too have 35mm battery wiring. I bought a pair of used indent crimpers (about 18" long) to do mine, but I was not satisfied with the crimps - not tight enough without soldering in addition.
I put them back on eBay and luckily made nearly £40 profit! I can now buy a set of the cheapest new hydraulic ones which do hexagonal crimps. They may not be top quality, but I hope they'll be ok for the limited use I'll give them.
Regards
Bob
 
I've just looked at those ebay small hydraulic crimping presses.


Some Qs.

1 which size is the best for standard battery cable pls (12v, 110 Ahr batteries, boat and car

2 if one got an engineering workshop to make up a cutting die instead of the crimping die, would the tool be OK to use for emergency rigging wire cutting ? I see there is only a 10mm gap.
 
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I just use copper pipe of the right bore soldered to the wire and hammered flat/drilled.
A hot air paintstripper augments the 75watt iron. Tin (plate) the whole thing with solder and it will look nice longer.
 
santeimo
The crimpers you purchased are not going to give you as good a crimp as possible. A good crimp "cold welds" the wire and requires a lot of pressure. The proper shaped dies are in good crimpers. Here's a link to making proper battery cables and the crimpers that cost effectively do the best job. I use the long handled ones in the link and they're excellent. http://www.pbase.com/mainecruising/battery_cables
 
I've crimped hundreds of lugs and connections using this type with no problems.

The pictures are from an ebay listing (click here)

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As they are adjustable rather than using fixed size tooling, they will accommodate varying size cable and tags. As others have said tinning helps to resist corrosion, but I haven't found that electrically necessary.

Picture5929.jpg
 
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