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A small demonstration of how I solder butt connectors.
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SOme conversation on it on Bronco nation if you did not watch the video , speaking specifically the process in text. People twisting wires is probably the worst thing to do.Those things have been a bit hit and miss to me. Sometimes it seems like the heat punches through and the whole thing melts and creates a bloody mess
I'll try to be short on this , the connectors for all my positives are one type of connector with TWO parts , a FEMALE and a MALE side. The grounds are all terminated at the end with lug terminals. Its literally impossible to get it wrong. So the kit I got from amazon is this.Are those connectors keyed the same? If so, wouldn’t bundling power together and ground together potentially make it easier to reverse polarity?
I just use a heat gun with low and hi from Milwaukee tools. Works great so far.In a recent Robbie Layton video he showed some sort of new self-soldering but connector but I think you might need to use a special heat gun tool.
You're right. The "knock offs" on Amazon are horrible. The original "solder seal" ones work better. I can only see using these if you can't solder, don't have the equipment or in a place that soldering would not be practical. The independent video's I have watched on these show the low temp solder does not completely flow thru the wires even when not twisted together. It bonds the outside wires nicely but when cut apart and the inside inspected there is not complete penetration as with traditional soldering. The larger the wire you try to use these on the more troublesome penetration becomes. The issue appears to be you can't get the solder hot enough to wick completely through the wires before the outside tubing starts to burn. I think it's better than the traditional crimp on butt connector and will probably work fine for the most part, but I'd rather have the best connection I can get the first time. Of course, I've had years of experience chasing down faulty automotive wiring, so I maybe jaded. lolThose things have been a bit hit and miss to me. Sometimes it seems like the heat punches through and the whole thing melts and creates a bloody mess
I may have to test the theory on that. I would be interested to see the difference in conductivity and strength of the wire. I got a way to test all this to a degree. Interesting.You're right. The "knock offs" on Amazon are horrible. The original "solder seal" ones work better. I can only see using these if you can't solder, don't have the equipment or in a place that soldering would not be practical. The independent video's I have watched on these show the low temp solder does not completely flow thru the wires even when not twisted together. It bonds the outside wires nicely but when cut apart and the inside inspected there is not complete penetration as with traditional soldering. The larger the wire you try to use these on the more troublesome penetration becomes. The issue appears to be you can't get the solder hot enough to wick completely through the wires before the outside tubing starts to burn. I think it's better than the traditional crimp on butt connector and will probably work fine for the most part, but I'd rather have the best connection I can get the first time. Of course, I've had years of experience chasing down faulty automotive wiring, so I maybe jaded. lol
good tips , yeah , deflector tip does work better for sure.I've had pretty good results with the cheap amazon stuff, haven't had to trash any that weren't my own fault to begin with. If you're not using a reflector nozzle on your heat gun for this (which you really should), then move your heat gun to the opposite side once you start melting the solder, and then back to the other side for a few seconds once it looks like the solder has fully flowed. The heat shrink tubing has a hard enough time conducting adequate heat to melt the solder ring, but it works better if the heat is dispersed around the circumference as opposed to localized heat in one spot. Sometimes that's the only way to properly flow the solder without burning the heat shrink. Low heat and good coverage is ideal.
You can also waterproof your own solder butt splices in a similar way for non-standard applications (multiple wires, for example), though it's not as convenient as these connectors. Drop shrink tube over one wire, use a western union splice on the exposed wires and solder together, use a hot glue gun to make a bead on the insulation close to the splice (you can coat the solder joint too if you want but if you use too much it'll just squish out and look messy). From there just run your shrink tube over the joint and heat until your glue beads start flowing.