Cookee
Well-Known Member
No the spring loaded one above it - Ref: 070390 Sprung Loaded Crimping Tool - That one looks like mine but I bought it elsewhere - I have done quite a lot of terminals with it and it works very well indeed.
With any wire its important that is mecanically supported. The abrupt junction between the wire and the terminal in a crimped connection causes the same problem.I would never solder a connector on 16mm a proper crimp with the correct tool is the way forward.
Why?
Because the solder wicks up the cable and where it stops reduces the flexibility of the cable leading to a breakage at that point from vibration.
In a proffesional enviroment crimps are the best solution. With the correct equipment, standardised terminals and procedures a very high quality, reproducible joint can be achieved. Soldering is much slower and more expensive.Even on fixed industrial installations they use crimps ask yourself why.
Well done amateur crimps are excellent as well, but measure the voltage the voltage drop over an older amateur crimp in large diameter wire and it is often poor.
I am trying to put tube terminals onto 16mm square wire. But the heat from the iron seems to just dissipate up the cable. Any tips?
Terminals are here http://www.furneauxriddall.com/acatalog/Copper_Tube_Terminals.html
With the new generation of ratchet crimp tools its very hard to do a bad crimp even the Chinese ones do a good job.
With the new generation of ratchet crimp tools its very hard to do a bad crimp even the Chinese ones do a good job.
......
Surely you mean one of theseOne assumes you mean "Ref: TN76 Copper Tube Crimping Tool" not one of the cheap ones.
That is actually a nice looking tool...... or slightly smaller capacity
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Manual-Hy...370?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_3&hash=item3f26d1483a
That is actually a nice looking tool...
That looks like it would be a good choice.or slightly smaller capacity
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Manual-Hy...370?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_3&hash=item3f26d1483a
Heat the terminal and not the cable, plus of course be careful a small gas bottle torch is what I use. I also put a piece of heatshrink sleeving on the cable, to put over the joint after soldering, to hide any slight melting. Sneeky!!
Many thanks for all the usefull info. Was going to order the 80 quid crimper untill i saw the 30 quid hydraulic one on ebay. Many hanks!
The one I referred to that you hit with a hammer is cheaper still ...