Renewable Energy Questions/Discussion > Wiring and Code discussion

Looking for input on a lug crimper

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Watt:
Here is what I use.  I like them, not a real clean crimp but looks fair crimped and heat shrink coated.  I'm looking for a die and dimple type crimper though.

http://www.anotherpower.com/gallery/Watt/IMG_20120122_205606

http://www.anotherpower.com/gallery/Watt/IMG_20120122_205656

bj:
  I have been using my guy cable crimper.  It's kind of built like a cable cutter/bolt cutter, but has
several different sizes in the jaws.  Substantially less than the price  limit, and I didn't have to muck
with it.
  Just a thought.
  P.S. got it from a local automotive supply store.

dang:
There is nothing like hitting the switch and having an electric hydraulic pump cycle the remote crimp head, loading up and growling to its final pressure spike before the limit switches open and having a glass smooth lug barrel that has liquefied the conductors and lug into a single block of metal be 'magically' revealed when you withdraw the cable assembly. The part I like is when its crimped that tight corrosion is stalled from creeping in the lug throat - condensation, corrosive fumes and the like can't attack the splice in a hidden area to turn into a higher resistive connection later on.

Barring piecing together a $1500 crimper machine from surplus sales the next best bet is the hand hydraulic crimper. The HF model has a 0.375" ram travel with a maximum 0.450" throat clearance. Deciding to stop at 2/0 AWG now is a little short sighted - chances are you will be looking at 4/0 or 250mcm at some point in the future. There is a $150 hand hyd crimper on eBay that has twelve die sets that should last you the rest of your RE career ifs its not used commercially.

I have a 40-year-old hand hyd crimper set that does tries to accomplish the liquefy trick but not really the same, just it works nicely. I also have a  Greenlee 36-inch compound leverage type with the multi-dies built in - great for a field repair but really* should  be saved just for that, if we're fabricating 26-pieces of battery jumpers and primary cable leads etc. they should be bench made with a high-power hydraulic crimper to get the extra edge on super low-resistance connections that will last the longest - and be the safest while unattended for years in the future.

luv2weld:
Like others here, I used everything I could find to crimp cables during my lifetime.
I've got one of the hammer type crimpers and there is no comparison between the connections that it makes and the hydraulic crimper.

Last year I was upgrading to 4/0 cable and decided to do it right. I bought these.......
http://www.ebay.com/itm/16-TON-HYDRAULIC-WIRE-CABLE-TERMINAL-CRIMPING-CRIMPER-/250803613752?pt=BI_Electrical_Equipment_Tools&hash=item3a650f7038#ht_500wt_1293

 And I am really pleased with the results.  I know they are a little over your spending limit, but I don't think you
will ever regret the extra $27. I don't think I will ever use the hammer crimper again. The hydraulic is just as fast
and you don't have to worry about hitting the thing off-center.

To make sure I get a good connection, I crimp my 4/0 lugs twice. The first crimp with the 120 dies and the second with
the 95 dies. I may be doing it wrong, but I'm pretty sure they are not going to loosen. If that doesn't make the metals flow together
then I guess I'm just outta luck.

It's really amazing how much fun it is to work when you have the right tools!!!!

Get the hydraulic. You will not be sorry.

Ralph

Rover:
Thanks all for the input, I am leaning towards a hydraulic handheld.

Rover

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