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well, well, well, what do you know...
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:clap: AWESOME!
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Once you sell the truck what are you going to do with all that free time??? You could make your truck posts into a book, good luck with the sale
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I do own three trucks: 1974 Rusty (the son) 1971 Dusty (Rusty's dad) [this will be the next epic build] 1954 Busty (Rusty's great grandfather, yes we skipped a generation) check that build out it was my biggest challenge thus far fer sure |
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folks, I'm a simple man, I see a hole, I gotta fill it
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what is he doing?
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ah ok, we knew that
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meanwhile on the Ride The Lightning LLC. electronic workbench we believe in the belt and suspenders approach, so we crimp and solder our connections
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I'm not a smart man but I know one thing about wiring: no matter what you do you won't please everybody
I once got accused of using the wrong wire just because I didn't source it from NASA but went to NAPA instead, well 7 years later the truck still hasn't caught on fire LOL so in order to keep the wiring under 50 feet we're attempting the daisy chain approach |
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Would you believe this, we had to stop and put things away, because my ex girlfriend decided to cook dinner on our WORKBENCH ! what a crock?
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so just a quick rant to see if you relate:
Man I am running out of everything working on this project, first I do not use the provided garbage connectors that AutoMeter grabs a handful of and throws them in the box, they are as bad as the hard yellow, blue, or red conduit ones you buy at AutoZone, that you crimp on your starter wire and then your truck won't start in the rain at night after some concert, ha ha, no thank you - you can notice the quality of [ahem] craftsmanship by what connectors people use on their rigs, it's sort of the right of passage and it's not just that they suck but they will ruin your gauges as you try and press them on and pull them off so I buy mine at MOUSER https://www.mouser.com/images/mouser...m.png?nosprite TE Connectivity 42238-2 Terminals https://www.mouser.com/images/tycoel...2238-2_SPL.jpg see how this guy has two sets of blades on the tail, one crimps and holds the wire shilelding for strength and the middle one holds the stripped off wire part for electrical conectivity type of thing so yeah, I ran out of these connectors, I ran out of soldering wire, I ran out of something else too, but I take pride in my work and I actually enjoy wiring, which reminds me Wiring Top Tip: (how not to hate it)thanks for reading, and honestly I am just trying to help you Young Padawans out |
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Not trying to take away from your post, but what is your opinion of these? In another post, somebody stated they were pretty good.
https://www.amazon.com/Crimping-Tool...8&sr=8-16&th=1 |
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https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/...AC_SL1500_.jpg so this set falls under the "Multi Tool Category" the problem that I have with tools like these is that its a major PIA and very time consuming to swap those attachments (since you have to find a matching top and bottom each time), now let me explain yes you can change them in 2 minutes but as you are wiring that adds up because say you are building a harness and you have 16 crimps to do and half of them need attachment A and the other need attachment B you just spent how many minutes swapping those heads, and I know you can do all your A crimps first and then do all your B crimps but that's not how you usually do stuff cause you will forget to go back and crimp something another problem is that both tools look too much alike, what I mean by that get one that has an orange handle and another one that has a blue handle type of thing, you will thank me later, you want to be able to find them on your messy workbench in a flash and distinguish them at a glance thirdly pass on that wire stripper, yes pros have the technique down for holding the wire in one hand and pulling the end off with that tool with the other hand, but beginners need a tool that does the work for them, so I will try to post an example of a proper wire stripper, that will make you run around the house looking for wiring projects, ha ha IRWIN VISE-GRIP Wire Stripper, Self-Adjusting, 8-Inch (2078300) great question though, keep them comming |
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so not to beat a dead horse to death, but this is my basic Line Up
1. notice the different color handles (well sorta, ha ha two are red(ish)did I really just say "periwinkle" yeah, yeah I did, go ahead suspend my Man Card I will be replacing that red wire stripper (far left) it sorta sucks I bought it at an auto parts store I think at like 10:58 PM one Saturday night right before they closed, ha ha to complete a project I was working on |
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I have come full circle and I'm pretty enamored of a nice set of OEM gauges. But if I had to swap them out for aftermarket, I'd want to get an all business set up like you got.
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I've worked with several different wire strippers over the years. I was never really sold on the Vise Grip style strippers like you show. Too big and klunky. I figured they'd be great for Romex. Some of my techs prefer them. Not everyone likes the same things. Pick em up and see how they feel in your hand. Then use the ones you like. Klein makes a copy of the Vise Grip style you pictured and a slightly different wire stripping tool with replaceable knives similar to the Ideal Stripmaster wire stripper tool family. I have one of the cheaper Klein knockoffs of the Stripmaster on the bench collecting dust. Not as refined as the Ideal tool. I like the operation of the Ideal Stripmaster. So far you can still buy them from The Borg at Lowes. Attachment 2131425 I've had something similar to the manual strippers below in my arsenal for near 45 years. Well before I was an adult. I've worn out and or lost several. They're really good for tight quarters where you can't even fit any of the manual strippers and they're really nice for stripping coaxial cable jacket once you get a feel for them. I don't even nick the outer braid. Attachment 2131427 Another tool I wouldn't be without are the old Craftsman Handi Cut tools. They make super clean cuts in Ethernet and other stranded wire. They're also my second favorite tool for stripping coaxial jacket. Attachment 2131438 |
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If you do any automotive or motorsports electrical work you do not have to buy the crimp tools that crimp the pins for one connector family only in one operation. That type of tool is real nice but they tend to be expensive and not super versatile. The cheaper ones don't seem to do a great job.
Delphi made two very versatile ratcheting terminal crimp tools. Actually more than two but these are the bees knees. They crimp terminals in two operations. The conductor is crimped in the proper cavity for that terminal & wire gauge. Then you move the partially complete assembly to another cavity where the insulation or seal wings are crimped in a second operation. I've crimped Deutsch DTM & DT open wing terminals, Molex GT, Metripak GT, Metripak 150 & 280, AMP Quadlok (VW AUDI), Weatherpak, Packard 56, and several other families on 14-20ga wires using the two Delphi tools. $220 for the pro level tools is a bargain for that versatility. They cost between $90 & $130 each but you can position the terminal and ratchet the tool down and re-position the wire without loosing the jaw closure. They will not open til you have completed the crimp cycle or cammed the emergency release open so you don't end up with an over or under crimped terminal. You can likely evilbay these off for $95-$100 each if you take care of them and suddenly decide you don't need em. -Delphi Ratcheting 12085270 Crimps Weatherpak and Metripak 150/280 sealed terminals... Three seal and two conductor wing cavities. https://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/...4&d=1583110667 -Delphi Ratcheting 12085271 Wide range crimper with five cavities for conductor and un-sealed insulation strain relief crimp wings. https://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/...3&d=1583110667 If you need to crimp Metripak 480 or 630 or Packard 59 terminals you need larger cavity tools but the above tools will crimp 85-95% of what you're likely to encounter. These are some less expensive $30ish non ratcheting tools. These are great for the weekend warrior that's crimping a few terminals or as a tool to hold you over til you can find a nicer one but you'll tire of them quickly if you're building vehicle harnesses for your hot rod or restorations. The downside is you can open them before the crimp operation is completed and end up with loose crimps and they don't have the positive stops of the more expensive tools so you can over crimp the terminals as well. -Wire and weather seal crimp tool for Weatherpak and Metripak 150/280 sealed terminals. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B002CCAEJ6 -Wide range wire and jacket wing crimp tool for unsealed and sealed connector conductor wings. This tool will not crimp the Weatherpak/Metripak/Molex-GT weather seals but it will crimp the conductor wings of those families and both wings of un-sealed terminals. https://www.amazon.com/Delphi-Packar.../dp/B003MWJ6SA Greg has something similar to this one in his arsenal. Sargent Tools makes some of the less expensive as well as ratcheting tools that match the Delphi tools in quality. They're made in the USA. Mouser carries Sargent tools. https://www.sargenttools.com |
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check out this video of how they work here: Adam Savage's Favorite Tools: Automatic Wire Strippers https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/...AC_SL1500_.jpg |
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This is a pretty good overview of the gambit of available strippers.
Those end strippers that Adam is showing off are similar in function to the Vise Grip tool. His old set are much better quality than the $15 versions but they both work. This is has positives and negatives. As Adam pointed out you hit a wall where the blade shears through the wire and insulation around 22-26ga wire. Another downside is the tool doesn't clip all the way around the insulation. Instead it nicks the insulation and pulls so some of the special stuff like the halon impregnated rail car wiring I work with on occasion tends to pull and stretch rather than cut off. If you look at the PVC and Crosslink Poly wires after you strip em you'll see that the jackets don't shear nicely rather they pull and stretch a bit before breaking off leaving a tapered end to the jacket using this style tool. Not as bad as the Hypalon FRA approved wire but not nice and sharp either. The Ideal Stripmaster type tool will strip 22-26ga as long as your knives have the proper slots for that gauge wire. I have a set with knives for fine gauge cable and a couple different sets with various knives for heavier gauge wires. The downside to the Stripmaster is the knives can nick the wire when they get really worn and loose from a lot of mileage. I have worn out one set. After 30 years of field work. |
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Wow, did I open up a can of worms! :) Thanks for all the info, from everybody!! Carry on Greg :)
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Hahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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OMG!!!!
HAHAHAHAHA!!! Hatzie is the best!! |
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