joe384
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2019
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- Viofo A139 3CH, A139 2CH, Mobius w/ Varifocal Zoom
Hi all,
I've been looking into crimping again after I was looking at splicing some wiring together, but I've kinda gone down a rabbit hole and I'm more confused then ever now!
There will probably be a few more threads with questions, looking at non-insulated connectors is a whole other minefield.
I have a crimping tool that I bought some years ago which came with a selection of connectors. (this one: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/B07JFK58R3)
I found the cablecraft document on crimping which has a section on insulated connectors. It suggests that insulated connectors typically have insulation support barrel:
However that all the insulated connectors I have seem to just have the wire barrel and no additional insulation barrel.
Looking at the tool it has a kind of ledge bit meaning it does the actual crimp and also does a more relaxed crimp on the nylon insulation at the same time. You can see this, the 'wing' part is the more relaxed crimp on the insulation.
I looked at some my fuse taps to see what type of crimps were used:
The one on the right was done by a similar tool (maybe even me), the others done by a one crimp tool (either a ratching tool or the more basic type)
But it looks like they maybe used the a non-insulated tool like this:
Also note the ones on the left and right are bullet terminals, which is why they look slightly bigger at the ends
I guess my questions/observations are:
I've been looking into crimping again after I was looking at splicing some wiring together, but I've kinda gone down a rabbit hole and I'm more confused then ever now!
There will probably be a few more threads with questions, looking at non-insulated connectors is a whole other minefield.
I have a crimping tool that I bought some years ago which came with a selection of connectors. (this one: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/B07JFK58R3)
I found the cablecraft document on crimping which has a section on insulated connectors. It suggests that insulated connectors typically have insulation support barrel:
However that all the insulated connectors I have seem to just have the wire barrel and no additional insulation barrel.
Looking at the tool it has a kind of ledge bit meaning it does the actual crimp and also does a more relaxed crimp on the nylon insulation at the same time. You can see this, the 'wing' part is the more relaxed crimp on the insulation.
I looked at some my fuse taps to see what type of crimps were used:
The one on the right was done by a similar tool (maybe even me), the others done by a one crimp tool (either a ratching tool or the more basic type)
But it looks like they maybe used the a non-insulated tool like this:
Also note the ones on the left and right are bullet terminals, which is why they look slightly bigger at the ends
I guess my questions/observations are:
- Does there actually exist any insulated terminals that actually have an insulation support barrel?
- If I wanted to use insulated heat shrink type of terminals, the tool I have would be useless as it's going to crush the heatshrink bit.
- Having the insulation crimped with the "wing" doesn't really seem to add anything at all