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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
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My use cases have been when we need to solder a wire to a braided shield (surrounding the wires). I do not know if that is the main purpose of them or not, but soldering a wire to a shield can be either tricky or difficult to provide a strong mechanical connection. I agree with the other sentiments expressed here - if it is able to help those teams that may not have someone to teach them how to solder - great! Do I think this is particularly helpful in FRC (as opposed to butt splices, levernuts, andersons, or soldering) - eh I won't be pushing to move to these instead, but I won't deem it a poor decision by those that do. This is what I see: -Advantage over levernuts: cheaper -Advantage over butt splices: stronger connection and more obvious that it's completed (crimping done by inexperienced people are likely to either crimp the wrong place, or not crimp hard enough). It is obvious (and like bilfred said - satisfying - to see the solder melt -Advantage over Andersons: cheaper (probably, I haven't confirmed), more permanent, and same crimp issues noted before -advantage over soldering: probably quicker, requires less experience -disadvantage over levernuts: takes longer, requires more tools than a wire stripper (or sharp edge), requires electrical power (or battery powered heat gun) -disadvantage over butt splices: more expensive, requires electrical power (or battery powered heat gun) -disadvantage over andersons: can't disconnect -disadvantage over soldering: more expensive, requires a decent check of wire on both ends (i.e. - there are some situations you can only solder to connect wires) |
Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
I'm glad this exists. It is an easy and mess-free way to create a strong electrical connection that anyone can visually verify is robustly held in place. I / my team might not use it, but there are a lot of situations where I would rather a team use these than try and crimp a connector with the improper tools / technique.
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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
What the heck are they using in their solder alloy? Full melt at 300F?
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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
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Are they RoHS compliant? |
Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
As several others have noted, these have been around for a long time. I saw them for the first time back in college 25 years or so ago. In my opinion they are a fairly reliable method of joining wires. However, knowledge and experience with good soldering techniques are still required when using these. It's very easy to create a cold solder joint if you aren't careful.
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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
One advantage of this method is that before the solder melts, you glue the wires into place. Sometimes in the heat of a quick moment (emergency repair in the pits etc) it's hard to hold two wire ends steady / champ wires down while soldering. This could be done safely by a very nervous person!
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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
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That is the root of my concern with these, everything I learned about soldering is that if you don't start with a good mechanical connection you will not get a good electrical connection. Even with the wires glued in place, there is not a solid mechanical connection. I have no doubt that these will work fine in a lot of applications, but I don't see the advantage. For a fast/easy fix you won't beat a crimp with the right tool. For smaller gauge wire I would rather solder and then heat shrink it. |
Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
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Re: New AM Shrink Tube Solder
EVeryone,
The basic rule of a good soldering job is that both wires reach a temperature that will allow the solder to flow in between the strands of the wire. These devices were developed for soldering a jumper wire to coaxial cable. The ring is meant to solder to the strands of the coax shield. In general, the shield uses very small stranding. These could be useful for emergency soldering of a broken wire but they are not fool proof. Do not trust them to have good mechanical strength. The two rings of non-metallic material are for water proofing. In use on coaxial cable, these would seal on one side to the outside jacket and the other side would be around the inner insulation surrounding the center conductor. |
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