Phog Allen
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2009
- Messages
- 83
Fantastic thread. This interests me since I do industrial electrical maintenance ans we are ALWAYS looking for a better way. We certainly do not run into salt spray and only occasionally the truly wet area or soaking from damaged water lines or steam leaks. I use a Thomas and Betts ratcheting crimper for uninsulated terminals. We buy the high temp, nickel/chrome looking terminals and boy are they tough. You have to really crank down on that crimper to get them started. It does a good job from my experiences with it.
I would agree completely with those who say their is no universal "best" for terminations in automotive applications as far as solder vs crimp is concerned. I am consistently impressed with the performance and life expectancy of GM Weather Pack and Metri Pack connectors. I have opened up a few of these on rear lights on trucks that were ten years old. Pretty clean inside with only minimal dust intrusion and no real water corrosion. I would love to have the proper terminals, bodies, and crimpers to put some of these together. It would be a great thing for upgrading rear lighting harnesses on old pickups which have usually been hacked up for trailer lighting, etc.
One thing I would add to the thread. Please, if at all possible, avoid the open flames for the heat shrink. We use a heat gun almost exclusively and it is superb for the task. It also doesn't soot up the shrink which I take as damage to the product. That may be wrong but it just doesn't seem right to have blackened shrink wrap. Anyway, heat guns are dirt cheap so use them. Oh yeah, you guys who lay around in sea water would have to be a bit careful with an electrical tool or appliance plugged in nearby! Again, thanks for the great post guys.
I would agree completely with those who say their is no universal "best" for terminations in automotive applications as far as solder vs crimp is concerned. I am consistently impressed with the performance and life expectancy of GM Weather Pack and Metri Pack connectors. I have opened up a few of these on rear lights on trucks that were ten years old. Pretty clean inside with only minimal dust intrusion and no real water corrosion. I would love to have the proper terminals, bodies, and crimpers to put some of these together. It would be a great thing for upgrading rear lighting harnesses on old pickups which have usually been hacked up for trailer lighting, etc.
One thing I would add to the thread. Please, if at all possible, avoid the open flames for the heat shrink. We use a heat gun almost exclusively and it is superb for the task. It also doesn't soot up the shrink which I take as damage to the product. That may be wrong but it just doesn't seem right to have blackened shrink wrap. Anyway, heat guns are dirt cheap so use them. Oh yeah, you guys who lay around in sea water would have to be a bit careful with an electrical tool or appliance plugged in nearby! Again, thanks for the great post guys.

