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Re: solder vs crimp Re: MOT supply construction question
Original poster: "davep by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <davep-at-quik-dot-com>
> I have seen this debate before, but it seems as if the
> discussion centers on solder VS crimping. What are the
> drawbacks of crimping AND soldering?
Excess time and effort spent.
Not a big deal if its personal time only.
Also, its useful to understand that 'well made'
crimp is quite good, by itself, arguably better than
may solder joints. (tho, as noted, a 'properly made'
crimp is a lot easier in a production environment.
> I have seen solder only connections "eject" the wire,
There should, probably, never be 'solder only'
connections: MUST be twisted (screwed, whatever)
first to provide structural strength.
And, how GOOD were the solder joints? (I learnt to
make solder joints at a young age & have seen
some remarkably bad ones since....)
> I have seen many crimp connectors "lose" the wire,
If well made, they won't. Most people haven't the
tooling to make them well.
> but I have never seen a crimp and solder joint fail for any
> reason other than extreme mechanical damage or heat, which
> would have ruined things regardless of the nature of their
>connection.
> Anyway, is there a failure mode that occurs only (or more often)
> when soldered and crimped?
Thermal damage to insulation.
corrosion from wrong flux.
(those are generic to soldering....)
best
dwp
(Electrical engineer...)
...the net of a million lies...
Vernor Vinge
There are Many Web Sites which Say Many Things.
-me