Pressure washer
New member
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2018
- Messages
- 2
- Tractor
- John Deere 720
Yup. a proper crimp is as strong as solder & less prone to vibration related fatigue. I put Anderson connectors on mine. Hook up the clamps, then connect the plug. Dont get dangling sparking clamps that way. Plan on mounting an Anderson plug to the grill on my next truck too. Never even have to pop your hood to jump somebody. I'd do it now, but the Tacoma & old beater F250 are likely to get sold or traded in for a newer diesel 3/4 ton within the year.IT will work but there are a lot better methods, I prefer crimped on connectors and to seal them heat shrink.... The thing is with solder the cable becomes brittle and will break right where the solder that wicked up the cable ends..
There are very few places in any industry today the uses soldered on terminals...
Dale
IT will work but there are a lot better methods, I prefer crimped on connectors and to seal them heat shrink.... The thing is with solder the cable becomes brittle and will break right where the solder that wicked up the cable ends..
There are very few places in any industry today the uses soldered on terminals...
Dale
Yup. a proper crimp is as strong as solder & less prone to vibration related fatigue. I put Anderson connectors on mine. Hook up the clamps, then connect the plug. Dont get dangling sparking clamps that way. Plan on mounting an Anderson plug to the grill on my next truck too. Never even have to pop your hood to jump somebody. I'd do it now, but the Tacoma & old beater F250 are likely to get sold or traded in for a newer diesel 3/4 ton within the year.
Yep, have Andersons on my tractor and vehicles.
My cables have one end Anderson fitted plus a shorter version that allows me to be double end clip.
Neat but lots of places make them and hydraulic hoses for the price of the parts.
Yep, have Andersons on my tractor and vehicles.
My cables have one end Anderson fitted plus a shorter version that allows me to be double end clip.
IT will work but there are a lot better methods, I prefer crimped on connectors and to seal them heat shrink.... The thing is with solder the cable becomes brittle and will break right where the solder that wicked up the cable ends..
There are very few places in any industry today the uses soldered on terminals...
Dale
Here is an explanation and graphic proof that soldering is indeed the better way to assemble cables...
Granted tractors/ automobiles etc. do not generally employ deep cycle, multi voltage cycle type activity but the same theory applies to standard agricultural or automotive applications...
scroll down to just above half way to see the graphic proof...
http://www.trojanbattery.com/pdf/WP_BatteryCableGuide_0512.pdf
Sorry but several billion crimped connections keeping most of the worlds telecommunications systems (local 2 wire dial-up , cellular, fiber optics, satellite and under seas cable) prove the document wrong....
38 years as telecommunication technician and everything from #12 up to 750,000 cm is a crimped connection.... And its a industry standard.....And it pretty hard to solder to a aluminum connector (lug) ....
Dale
When I was a QA inspector for passenger rail cars we used crimp connectors. But we used them because they are a much simpler way to make the connection. Solder requires heat and time where as a crimp takes seconds. Also when you are using good crimping tools they are repeatable. Those cheap wire stripper/ crimping tools are junk. With the expensive ones they will only allow you to crimp the connector so far. We had to test both new hires as well as certify the crimping tools by having a tech crimp connectors on both ends of a short wire. We would then pull it apart. For each type of connector/ gauge of wire it had to exceed a certain amount of force before the wire pulled out of the connector.
Here is an explanation and graphic proof that soldering is indeed the better way to assemble cables...
Granted tractors/ automobiles etc. do not generally employ deep cycle, multi voltage cycle type activity but the same theory applies to standard agricultural or automotive applications...
scroll down to just above half way to see the graphic proof...
http://www.trojanbattery.com/pdf/WP_BatteryCableGuide_0512.pdf
Did you read crimped AND soldered?The infrared picture below shows a cable with crimped and soldered
connector under a high-rate discharge. Note that the high temperature area
is no longer near the connecting junction but evenly distributed along the
cable and battery terminal.