Very helpful advice from everyone - exactly the info I was hoping for! I will use the PIDG terminals and the TE 58433-3 crimper (from Digi-key!). The documentation from TE is first rate. Need a little clarity on the technique you are suggesting for terminating the shield - are you suggesting soldering the shield wire to a ring terminal? Or is the idea here to splice the shield to a short piece of solid wire and then crimp the wire to the ring terminal? Really appreciate the help!Tyco brand MS25036 series terminals otherwise known as PIDG terminals, are all I use. New Tyco tools range from $150 to eye wateringly expensive, homebuilders generally use anything that does a decent job.
https://www.mouser.com/pdfdocs/ENG_DS_82042_StdTermsSplices_0708.pdf
I would terminate the shields using M83519/1-3 solder sleeves, more wire and ring terminals rather than what the OEM did when it was new.
Also, given that the red MS25036 terminals cover wire gauges from 22 to 16, I'd use 16 gauge wire. It doesn't need wire that big since there is barely any current in it ever but 16 gauge is beefier and more resistant to breaking.
Aircraft Spruce has all the terminal sizes.
https://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/elpages/insulterms.php?recfer=21960
Did all of the wiring in my plane (hundreds of connectors) with a single pair of these. Pull tested everyone of them and never had a single one come apart. I have almost 300 hours on my plane now without any electrical problems (ok, except for the ones i created...).
I purchased crimpers on Amazon and am quite happy with them.
https://www.amazon.com/Titan-Tools-...d=1540220974&sr=8-3&keywords=terminal+crimper
Very helpful advice from everyone - exactly the info I was hoping for! I will use the PIDG terminals and the TE 58433-3 crimper (from Digi-key!). The documentation from TE is first rate. Need a little clarity on the technique you are suggesting for terminating the shield - are you suggesting soldering the shield wire to a ring terminal? Or is the idea here to splice the shield to a short piece of solid wire and then crimp the wire to the ring terminal? Really appreciate the help!
If more solder sleeves are in your future, you can go top shelf and get a reflector (or build your own) for your heat gun.The solder sleeve is a very neat solution to the p-lead project
I already have what appears to be a high quality heat gun - with all the accessories - in my Amazon cart. What's the correct temperature for the solder sleeves?
I already have what appears to be a high quality heat gun - with all the accessories - in my Amazon cart. What's the correct temperature for the solder sleeves?
I did an Oshkosh workshop once where one of the $100+ tools was used by the other guy and I used a $30 Klein 1002, the same one I've been using since they taught me how to use one 50 years ago. Somebody poked fun at me for using a "toy tool". I loaded up a ring terminal with about 6' of #16 wire and hung it from a nail in the overhead. I started doing a chin-up slowly so as not to put jerk force on it. The wire broke when I was about 6" off the ground; the crimp held just fine. It isn't the cost of the tool that makes a good crimp, but the experience and skill of the crimper.
Jim
Most certainly an analogue to many aspects of our world today. Thanks Jim.It isn't the cost of the tool that makes a good crimp, but the experience and skill of the crimper.
Jim
I already have what appears to be a high quality heat gun - with all the accessories - in my Amazon cart. What's the correct temperature for the solder sleeves?