"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
...
"Dave Plowman" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Arny Krueger wrote:
BTW, a good job of crimping amounts to cold welding with the extra
bonuses of high mechanical strength and inherent disruption of oxide
films or dirt on the connector or the wire. Given my choice, I'd pick
a
well-crimped connection over the other two, but I would not worry
about
a good job based on the other two methods. Crimping and welding have
the
disadvantage of not being as field-repairable as soldering.
The other beauty of crimping is that there is no weakening due to heat
close to the joint - perhaps not that important where the lead is
adequately clamped, though. However, *proper* crimping requires a
usually
very expensive special tool, and frequently it is only of use for one
specific connector.
Agreed. The best crimpers are heavy, complex, costly, and provide lots of
mechanical advantage.
Here's the crimping tool of my dreams:
http://www.centralofficetools.com/in...D=32&do=detail
SNAKE OIL, SNAKE OIL
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