Adios
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yes the point has been made and taken, my bad!Join an anti-slavery forum if you want to discuss this. You know it makes sense.
Ink
yes the point has been made and taken, my bad!Join an anti-slavery forum if you want to discuss this. You know it makes sense.
Ink
Welding cable is perfect, good insulation, fine strands & tinned.
Not too sure about 'knock ons' in long term use.
With the hydraulic crimper, they are intended for cable with less strands than we normally use for battery cables, to get a decent crimp, you may have to use the next size down dies.
Regarding those anvil type tools, save you money and just thrash the lug with a hammer and punch, or squash it in a vice, it won't be any worse a connection. Soldering would be a better job, if you can solder well.
I've only done a major battery re-wire once, on my last boat, and I "crimped" the terminals with a Mole wrench and then soldered them using a gas blowtorch. Wet kitchen paper wrapped around the insulation stops it burning. All worked fine for many years.
I am a fan of soldering. It produces a great, low resistance electrical connection. The main problem is that in a fault condition the joint can overheat and potentially the solder joint can reach its melting temperature releasing the wire.
Therefore, it is generally better to have a mechanical connection as well as a solder joint.
I use this dual process for most of my marine electrical connections. This is not practical for commercial installations, as it is very time consuming. For a DIY application this “belt and braces” approach is worth considering.
Do you solder then crimp, or crimp then solder ?
Always crimp then solder, otherwise in a high temperature fault condition the solder can melt releasing the crimp and therefore defeating the purpose.
If the soldering is applied on the connector side of the crimp, assuming a gas tight crimp the solder will not influence the flexibility of the joint but will provide a second and independent electrical and mechanical connection. Belt and Braces.
This is overkill. Crimped connections are perfectly fine on their own, but crimped connections are only ideal with calibrated wire connection terminals and crimping tools. For the amateur crimpted and soldered connections provide some added security and the added time involved is less of a concern.
You can say that again! The cables on my domestic bank are, I think, 95mm2. No idea what Bavaria thought the likely loads would be.
View attachment 106347
The idea of the big cables is to reduce resistance so the charge or discharge is evenly spread. Though there are other ways to do it. Buss bars etc.
Nothing wrong with welding cable, but it isn't normally tinned (also nothing wrong with using non-tinned cable in appropriate locations).
I don't understand you 2nd paragraph. Welding cable, battery cable, OceanFlex cable, generally have the same stands, the hydraulic crimper works perfectly on all three. Number of strands is surely irrelevant anyway, 35mm cable is 35mm cable, regardless of how many strands are needed to make it 35mm.
With the Chinese crimper, I have had some crimps, that were loose, I always give the crimped lug a good pull to check. Using next size down gives a solid crimp, even if there is some 'flash' on the edge.
May be that the dies i have are not particularly well specified.
If you have a 12v system it is often surprising the size of cables that are needed. If Bavaria are using larger cables than most they are to be congratulated.
For example if we limit voltage drop to 3% ( so 12.5v at the the batteries will be 12.13v supplying the appliance) larger than a 95mm cable would be required if the device has a total cable run of over 7m (one way) and the draw is 120A or higher. This is just one example, but it shows that for modern nedium or large yacht 95mm battey cables are not necessarily overkill, especially when considering battery cables may be required to supply multiple high draw devices.
At 0.193 ohms/km (BS6346 Cables|Technical Reference) that would be a total voltage drop of 0.6V. Doesn't seem toooo bad.Voltage drop often gets ignored on 12v systems. There was a recent thread about bow thrusters where an industrial electrician insisted 95mm was applicable for a 7m-7.5m one way cable run for a bow thruster drawing 200a.He said it was "more professional" than running two 95mm cables, which the manufacturer recommended.