The most talked about Hakko was model 936 and I have one. Check it out!
I would take Made in Japan electronic over Made in USA any day!
The 936 was a workhorse. Out of production of course, and on occasion, you might see one on eBay, but with most sellers not knowing enough, it's too easy to get a dud. And at ~$100 or perhaps a bit less, the FX-888 (left over stock at this point) or 888D can be had.
As per US made irons, there aren't that many, and the only ones I'd probably even consider, would be Pace or Metcal. Weller no longer makes irons in the US (Mexico or Germany <with Asian produced PCB's in them>).
Looking around I think I have settled on American Beauty. What amperage should I be looking at? I'm stuck between 60-75 and 100.
Not a fan of American Beauty at all.
Nor should you get hung up on the wattage. JBC's 40W irons can beat the **** out of stuff double or better due to the fact it gets the heat transfered better than the higher power competitors (why they work so well; just not cheap, but at this level, you're not looking at bargain basement stuff anyway).
I understand that a good solid crimp is typically preferred. However the harness manufacture recommended that any connections be crimped and soldered. So that is what I intend to do.
This isn't actually recommended as a general rule, as it can anneal the terminal.
There are terminals that do this, and instances that these are required, but there was a lot of engineering that went into them (i.e. pre-measured amounts of solder and flux, and the alloy composition has a lower melting point than off the shelf solder <think similar to Chip Quick>). The entire idea is that the solder cannot wick in past the insulation, and that the heat gun used (at the temp specification) is hot enough to melt the solder at the same temperature that's used for the heat shrink.
first off most people don't realize the difference in the quality of different types/manufactures of crimped terminals and as if not more important the crimping tools used.
Absolutely.
Good terminals are required, which means they're not the cheapest thing that can be found. It's also necessary to make sure the tooling and terminals work together properly (no over or under crimping going on).
What special die does that require? I have done those successfully with a similar crimper with the die designed for insulated terminals.
It's similar, but it's missing the insulation crimp. The reason for this, is heat shrink tubing is not supposed to be pinched at all, so it seals properly (pinch points can leave an open gap for moisture/liquids to penetrate into the the terminal).
What you did "works", but from a technical standpoint, it qualifies as a failed crimp.
Where can I purchase one to avoid getting stuck with the Chinese knockoff?
Get it from an authorized distributor or directly from HakkoUSA. Even Amazon has the real deal.
Biggest thing that will prevent you from getting a clone is stay off of eBay, aliexpress, dealextreme, ... sorts of sites.
