Alex_Blackwood
Well-Known Member
Way too much bare metal showing. They may have been used on purpose to facilitate easy disconnection. I would have used bullet connectors. Already enough said about proper tools etc.
Another problem with any solder joint is that sooner or later you're going to have to disconnect it, by cutting the wire. OK if there is spare length, but if not it means introducing two new joints. 6mm spades actually seem pretty reliable to me, though I sometimes slide 8mm plain heatshrink over the whole pair of male/female connectors and half an inch of wire each side and shrink it on. Guarantees they won't pop undone and helps keep it dry, and you can always carefully slit it and peel off if you need to unplug.
Hello,
I was wondering the committee's thoughts on my new-to-me boat's electrics. My feelings are that they are above average for a 25-year-old boat, probably because it was with a single owner that whole time.
These connectors look a bit basic and DIY, but I don't see an immediate need to to renew them - I think it's the sheer number of spade connectors that make them look so ugly (to my eye at least), but surely these are up to the job?
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I'm inclined in future to use some of those connectors that heatshrink and solder in one. Assuming this proposal meets your approval, what should I heat them with? Gas-powered soldering iron?
Thanks in advance for any thoughts you might have.
Hate insulated crimps, cannot check crimping for quality, also crimps in sea air can be subject to zinctivication and go brittle, you end up with two male connectors. Would prefer waterproof multiway connector, neat, dry and cable supported.
That said if it looks okay, clean and works why change.
Brian
Yes they vary in quality enormously too and it’s hard to tell one from another. I won’t ever buy the non heat shrink ones, but I am a fan of those as stated above. They are semi transparent of course so you can check your crimp.
There are only two ways to make an electrical connection on a boat.
Using tinned wire of the appropriate size that has a cable number referring to a correct drawing, with an uninsulated crimp, soldered and then covered with glue lined heat shrink.
And the wrong way
There are only two ways to make an electrical connection on a boat.
Using tinned wire of the appropriate size that has a cable number referring to a correct drawing, with an uninsulated crimp, soldered and then covered with glue lined heat shrink.
And the wrong way
What a load or nonsense !!!!
every single connection on my boat is blissfully and reliably wrong therefore.
Sadly most are and reliable until they go wrong
Sadly most are and reliable until they go wrong
So why would that be?
Everything about your post was just wrong. For instance, why on Earth would you use a crimp connector and then solder it ? If the crimp is done correctly, soldering is a complete waste of time, the solder cannot get into the joint, it just goes over it.
It's a pointless waste of time using uninsulated terminals and then insulating them with heat shrink. Normal, good quality, insulated terminals are perfectly secure. If the connection is in an area where it needs to be especially waterproof, glue lined, heat shrink crimps are the way to go.
There are only two ways to make an electrical connection on a boat.
Using tinned wire of the appropriate size that has a cable number referring to a correct drawing, with an uninsulated crimp, soldered and then covered with glue lined heat shrink.
And the wrong way
7.2.26 The following requirements apply for crimped connections.
a. Crimped contacts shall be used with stranded wire only.
b. Solid wire shall not be used with crimped contacts.
c. Solid, tinned wire shall not be used in crimped contacts.
13.3 Assembly of Solder-Type Connectors
13.3.1 Wire shall be bent only in flexible, unwicked parts of the conductor to maintain stress
relief for solder dipped conductors. In all instances, stranded conductors will experience solderwicking during attachment. The conductor will be rigid up to the point where the wicking stops
and flexible beyond it. Wire movement concentrates stress at the point where wicking stops and
normal harness handling can produce conductor fatigue and failure.
13.3.2 Solid conductors shall be assembled in contacts by soldering, and cleaned and inspected
in accordance with the latest revision of IPC J-STD-001FS.
13.3.3 Contact mating surfaces and solder joints shall be cleaned to remove flux residue
following the soldering operation.
Note: CAUTION: WHERE SOLDER CONTACTS HAVE FLOAT, FLUX MAY RUN
DOWN ONTO THE MATING SURFACE OF THE CONTACT DURING SOLDERING
AND CAUSE INTERMITTENT AND OPEN CIRCUITS.
Solderless Makes Sense
We tend to think of soldered joints as the king of electrical connections. Something about the act of heating up a joint and flowing molten solder into it lends a feeling of permanence and quality to the finished product. And soldering was basically the only show in town for the early days of the commercial electronics industry.
But soldered joints have their problems, both electromechanically and in terms of production – after all, an assembly worker can only sling solder around so fast. In the early 1950s, AMP Corporation came out with the first crimp connections for production use, the F-Crimp or open-barrel design. Using this crimping design, AMP sold a wide range of connectors that could be rapidly and repeatably applied to conductors, and that lent themselves to automated fabrication methods in a way that soldering would never be able to achieve.
Squeeze Play
Crimping takes advantage of the properties of metals to achieve electrically and mechanically sound connections. Metals used in crimp connectors, like copper, brass, aluminum, or bronze, are both ductile and malleable. A metal’s ductility is the degree to which it can deform under tension, while malleability is a measure of how metal deforms under compression. Crimping involves applying significant compressive forces onto the crimp connector and the wire, so the malleability of each element is an important factor in crimp quality. But ductility plays a role too as both connector and wire undergo significant stretching during the crimping process. .......
I think, to be fair, Rocksteadee's method is OK for amateur use.
My opinion, a properly executed crimp needs no solder and heating it all up, smearing it with solder and flux is likely to do more damage than good.