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    Recommendation for Insul. Crimp Terminals Crimping Tool?

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    Duet Hardware and wiring
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    • Mautundefined
      Maut
      last edited by

      I'm using this one:
      https://www.amazon.com/Titan-Tools-11477-Ratcheting-Terminal/dp/B0069TRKJ0

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • hayseed_byteundefined
        hayseed_byte
        last edited by

        For regular ring/fork terminals, I use Klien Crimpers. My dad bought the ones I use in the early 90's when he was a maintenance technician and now I use them as a maintenance technician. They last forever, create strong crimps and are simple to use. I've never seen anyone use the ratcheting ones for regular crimp terminals.

        https://wildbot.me/wildbot
        Gcode Definitions for VSCode extension: https://github.com/hayseedbyte/rrf-gcode-definitions

        wilrikerundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • sigxcpuundefined
          sigxcpu
          last edited by

          I got this https://www.banggood.com/Paron-JX-D5301-Multifunctional-Ratchet-Crimping-Tool-Wire-Strippers-Terminals-Pliers-Kit-p-1175325.html?rmmds=myorder&cur_warehouse=CN.

          Tested the Molex KK for Duet only, but other dies look fine, too.

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          • crynoolundefined
            crynool
            last edited by

            Over the last couple of weeks, I bought a lot (and I mean a lot) of Crimping Tools from Amazon for testing purposes for all kind of Crimp Terminals.
            I kept some, sent others back, most between 15 and 50 USD.

            Some are good (the manual ones, give you good control over the crimp), others are really bad

            0_1532899113322_crimper.JPG

            JoergS5undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • JoergS5undefined
              JoergS5 @crynool
              last edited by

              @crynool I thought the isolated crimps and the tool which crimps in one step is the best solution. But yesterday the main voltage connection to Duet slipped out. I had unhappy results with crimping yellow connector to solarcable before also.

              So I will use a manual tool for unisolated crimps in the future with the 2-step procedure, protecting the crimp after I am sure the connection is secure.

              I bought the PA-09 and PA-20, they seem to be very good.

              crynoolundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • crynoolundefined
                crynool @JoergS5
                last edited by

                @joergs5
                Yup, they are, have them both as well as another one, same company. Missed the Return Window. 😉

                The yellow in the middle squeezed the wire and damaged the insulation ... nothing shrink tube cannot fix, but ...

                JoergS5undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • JoergS5undefined
                  JoergS5 @crynool
                  last edited by

                  @crynool funny, the crimp tool which failed so dangerously is also yellow. So it's proven that yellow crimp tools don't work 😉

                  0_1532901640921_crimptool.jpg

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                  • autschundefined
                    autsch
                    last edited by autsch

                    The best for the price (a have it in orange and blue):
                    alt text
                    https://de.aliexpress.com/item/Crimpen-zangen-HS-03BC-8-backe-f-r-stecker-rohr-insuated-nicht-isolierende-crimpen-kappe-koaxialkabel/32893154249.html?spm=a2g0s.13010208.99999999.276.24853c00aaDUdm
                    I have the 190mm and 230mm Version.

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                    • wilrikerundefined
                      wilriker @hayseed_byte
                      last edited by

                      @hayseed_byte These Klein Crimpers look basically like the beefy manual tool I was hoping to find. Will have to see if I can get them at a reasonable price here in Germany, though.

                      From someone whose opinion I trust very much I also got a recommendation for ratcheting tool BGS 1412.

                      Manuel
                      Duet 3 6HC (v0.6) with RPi 4B on a custom Cartesian
                      with probably always latest firmware/DWC (incl. betas or self-compiled)
                      My Tool Collection

                      autschundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • autschundefined
                        autsch @wilriker
                        last edited by autsch

                        @wilriker why buy in germany, when they are manufactured in China?
                        It looks like you only want to talk about crimping 😉
                        Here my recomendation Nr 2, price made in germany:
                        https://www.bauhaus.info/crimpzangen/knipex-crimp-hebelzange/p/11025709

                        wilrikerundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • wilrikerundefined
                          wilriker @autsch
                          last edited by

                          @autsch If I would by a ratcheting crimper from Knipex I would prefer the PreciForce one. Only half the price but probably equally good.

                          Also I do buy from China if I can get the same product - but neither Knipex nor Klein produce in China. And I am tired of cheap tools that don't work, especially if I work with mains voltage. I rarely do but then I don't want to worry about live wires falling out of crimps (as I had with a cheap one already).

                          But I am still collecting recommendations and will decide a little later.

                          Manuel
                          Duet 3 6HC (v0.6) with RPi 4B on a custom Cartesian
                          with probably always latest firmware/DWC (incl. betas or self-compiled)
                          My Tool Collection

                          hayseed_byteundefined autschundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • hayseed_byteundefined
                            hayseed_byte @wilriker
                            last edited by

                            @wilriker said in Recommendation for Insul. Crimp Terminals Crimping Tool?:

                            Also I do buy from China if I can get the same product - but neither Knipex nor Klein produce in China. And I am tired of cheap tools that don't work, especially if I work with mains voltage.

                            Heh, even though they say they're not insulated because they don't have the rubber coating on the shaft, my Klein 6-in-1 has saved my life more than once. The one I use at work has a pretty gnarly burned spot on the shaft.

                            Knipex makes good stuff, too. Germany made is usually better than USA Made, I gotta admit. Been eyeing some Knipex dykes lately, myself.

                            https://wildbot.me/wildbot
                            Gcode Definitions for VSCode extension: https://github.com/hayseedbyte/rrf-gcode-definitions

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                            • autschundefined
                              autsch @wilriker
                              last edited by

                              @wilriker, if you have to crimp thousands of connectors, how I had in RocknRoll and Soundstudio business, Knipex is worth the money.
                              How many connectors do you have to crimp a day?

                              wilrikerundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • wilrikerundefined
                                wilriker @autsch
                                last edited by

                                @autsch Actually, I rarely have to crimp wire terminals at all. Therefore an expensive ratcheting tool like the PreciForce or comparable tools from Wiha and others are far down the list because they would be overkill for my usage.
                                But a cheap tool that doesn't do the job right is no option for me either because when I have to do it I want to have it done right first try.

                                In the first post I already referenced the Knipex 97 22 240 as a tool that is good quality (I think) at an affordable price. Not much more expensive (at the moment) and recommended by someone outside this forum that I trust is the BGS 1412 but I do prefer manual tools because they usually are lighter, cheaper (compared to equal quality ratcheting tool) and give me more control.

                                What I don't like about the above manual Knipex tool is that it has a lot of functionality that I do not need like wire stripping and cutting (I already have good tools for these tasks) and I rather like the "do one thing and do it good" approach. That's where the Klein tool would be more appropriate or something like a Snap On 29CF (which is hard to get in Germany as it seems to me).
                                I have also seen someone using Knipex 97 71 180 to crimp insulated wire terminals but that feels wrong to me.

                                And since I also trust this community here I was asking about recommendations. In the end I will select from all recommendations the tool that feels right for me.

                                Manuel
                                Duet 3 6HC (v0.6) with RPi 4B on a custom Cartesian
                                with probably always latest firmware/DWC (incl. betas or self-compiled)
                                My Tool Collection

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