Thanks for all the replies and sorry it took me so long to get back to this problem I was swatting out some other fires!
I am assuming you already went to Rueters to get the cable terminal and asked them how to fix it? I haven't worked on a JCB for 5 years, but they use a standard battery, so you could always make a new cable with standard ends for it.
Yep Second stop was Rueters ( first was NAPA to look at all their catalogs of battery terminals ) Their suggestion was to buy a new battery cable and from their point of view I agree
Or use a marine battery terminal:
http://www.jcwhitney.com/DEKA-MARINE-BATTERY-TERMINALS/GP_2006070_N_111+10201+600000921_10101.jcw
Available at any auto parts store. Then use a crimp-on welding cable lug on the cable itself. I usually solder them after crimping.
I have thought about that solution and I may just do that I picked up a bolt together battery terminal / disconnect from my first napa trip, that would probably work "ok"
That is the same ones that toyota uses. They are in stock in the parts dept.
I also looked at a ton of Toyota terminals and although they all look like the terminal I posted above none of them hook up a second wire with that strange tapered clamp/nut/wire lug arrangement as above...
Humm.. I'll call JCB over here and ask about getting hold of the 90 degree tapered end if you want, or try a plant machine breaker and ask if they have one.
Well a call to JCB would be cool if you think you can get them to tell you where they get the ends ( I don't think that they will sell just the end though as there is not a part number for them in their system)
I looked at a terminal like nissan_crawler showed ( in a HD truck version with 4 bolts) and could use one like it, IF it has the clamped cable intering from the "Side" of the terminal instead of the end so it would not interfere with the mounting of the fuse box.
I have used a left handed bit and easy-outs to save the cable on a JCB before, usually, it is quicker to just make a new cable.
Yep been there and didn't get it out, left hand drilled it, kroll'ed it, splined extractor ( twisted splines and then spun), spiral extractor tweaked until I thought it was going to snap off! I may be able to drill it over size and tap it to a SAE 5/16th. In retrospect I should have welded a nut on it and tried that first.....
So we now come to my latest plan. I'm thinking about getting a 1.5" piece of 5/8" brass hex and making my own end. Cut the tapered end off the 90 deg part and solder the 90 in to my adapter....
William