[Noisebridge-discuss] Good crimpers (recommendation needed)

Mitch Altman maltman23 at hotmail.com
Fri Apr 21 11:55:08 UTC 2017


$23 bucks with free shipping -- really good deal, if it is OK quality.  Could you please report back after you use it?

________________________________
From: noisebridge-discuss-bounces at lists.noisebridge.net <noisebridge-discuss-bounces at lists.noisebridge.net> on behalf of Zach R <organicunity at hotmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 20, 2017 7:04:38 PM
To: NB Discuss
Subject: Re: [Noisebridge-discuss] Good crimpers (recommendation needed)


Thanks Bryon and Mitch!!
I went ahead and got these:


amazon.com/Iwiss-Crimping-0-08-1-0-Ratcheting-Connector/dp/B01N1RFZZ4/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1492740169&sr=8-2&keywords=28+awg+crimper

SN-2549 is the model.  This one has only good reviews and is a newer version of whats on aliexpress.  and its in the US already, pretty sweet deal i think!

________________________________
From: noisebridge-discuss-bounces at lists.noisebridge.net <noisebridge-discuss-bounces at lists.noisebridge.net> on behalf of Bryon Roché <kain at kain.org>
Sent: Wednesday, April 19, 2017 9:43 PM
To: noisebridge-discuss at lists.noisebridge.net
Subject: Re: [Noisebridge-discuss] Good crimpers (recommendation needed)

So, those look pretty similar to mc3/mc4 terminals -- while it is technically possible to crimp them with a generic non ratcheting crimp wrench, it can be a pretty big pain from my experience.

The difference between crimps that use a generic connector and ones that want a good ratchet are in how the crimps are assembled. If you look at the detail picture you linked, you will see that the crimp splits in the middle top. Crimps that are more for generic electrical use tend to have a crimp where the crimping sleeve is already wrapped around itself somewhat or is just a solid tube.

That split makes the crimps easier to manufacture en masse (stamped metal and a bender ftw). The downside is you need a more precise tool to crimp reliably..

Those sorts of tools generally have a pliers or ratchet attached to some sort of die.

If you're a professional contractor maybe a $300 tool there makes sense, but if you search multiple vendors you can likely find a decent entry level ratcheting crimper that matches that crimp in the $50-70 range. Don't forget to check Amazon and Aliexpress, and you'd probably do well to check McMaster and Grainger, too.

If you're looking for details on a good one, find one for which you can source the ratchet and dies separately. That may be a lot more time than you have to spend, though.


On April 18, 2017 5:40:03 PM PDT, Zach R <organicunity at hotmail.com> wrote:

Hey all,

making a project with 28AWG wire and 2mm JST connectors with these crimps:

https://www.digikey.com/product-detail/en/jst-sales-america-inc/SPH-002T-P0.5L/455-2148-1-ND/1634657

I have *no* idea where to start with decent crimpers (ive always soldered everything).  the ones JST recommends are like $300.  any mid-budget ones that people like out there?  what parameters have to match with diff brands?

thanks!

-Zach



--
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.noisebridge.net/pipermail/noisebridge-discuss/attachments/20170421/d819a89a/attachment-0003.html>


More information about the Noisebridge-discuss mailing list