Stainless Steel Ferrule Crimping

Ian_Rob

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I want to make up a couple of lengths of 3mm stainless steel wire with loops at the ends using s/steel thimbles secured them with s/steel ferrules. Available ferrules seems to be lozenge shape. Will my hexagonal battery crimpers that are supposedly rated up to 10 tons, give an acceptable crimp?
 

2Tizwoz

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I want to make up a couple of lengths of 3mm stainless steel wire with loops at the ends using s/steel thimbles secured them with s/steel ferrules. Available ferrules seems to be lozenge shape. Will my hexagonal battery crimpers that are supposedly rated up to 10 tons, give an acceptable crimp?
I have used an 8 tonne hydraulic crimp to make slings from 6mm wire, but used copper ferrules. They were tested to three times swl.
 

DownWest

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NO to the idea of battery crimpers.
Stainless wire is usually made up with stainless thimbles and copper ferrules. I use a 20 ton press , but that goes up to 5mm or more.
Unless I have missed something, never seen ss ferrules.
The swage blocks need to be the right size, not a guess with battery crimpers.
You say lozenge shape? Actually a sort of flattened oval. Room to put the two wires in, then swage to round.

Have a look at S3i 's web site. They can do this for you at a reasonable price, or supply the bits.

Here: Stainless Steel Hardware, Wire Rope Fittings and Components | S3i Group

PS, if you can find or make the crimp blocks, maybe your battery crimper woud do. But seems a fuss for four ends.
 
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Iliade

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At 74p each I say buy a couple and try it. Proof test to a load in excess of your requirement. Pretty sure mine is a 16 ton one and it will easily secure 3mm s/s terminals and considerably larger copper talurits. Do your crimps really need to be stainless? It is not normal marine practice.
 
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