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  #1  
Old 11-19-2008, 07:50 AM
Camillo Camillo is offline
 
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Default Bending uninsulated terminal is safe?

A friend of mine is an electrician and works on ultralights electrical systems. He is very well known for his competence.
He looked at my main power cable (for battery and/or alternator power) 6AWG uninsulated terminal which I terminated on my own and told me that it is not safe to bind the terminal part of the terminal to match the bus bar. This will lead - he says - to breaking along time.
My doubt is that Van's suggests to do this on battery + uninsulated terminal with Odyssey instructions.
Does anyone know if this is a common and safe practice or not?
Thanks.
Camillo
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  #2  
Old 11-19-2008, 09:24 AM
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kevinh kevinh is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Camillo View Post
He looked at my main power cable (for battery and/or alternator power) 6AWG uninsulated terminal which I terminated on my own and told me that it is not safe to bind the terminal part of the terminal to match the bus bar.
Hmmm. I don't quite follow - can you rephrase this question? Is he saying that the metal tab on the terminal will crack due to vibration.
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  #3  
Old 11-20-2008, 08:23 AM
Camillo Camillo is offline
 
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Yes. Exactly. I installed a 6AWG uninsulated ring terminal. This terminal has to be screwed to tha main bus copper bar. Due to the difficulty to bind 6AWG cable, I preferred binding of approx. 45? the ring part of the terminal, in order to let it stay flat with the bar without spring action.
Thanks.
Camillo
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  #4  
Old 11-20-2008, 08:33 AM
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Radomir Radomir is offline
 
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Just to make a small ESL correction -- Camillo means BENDING the terminal (not binding)

I've seen it done, but I can see how it could raise some concerns..
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  #5  
Old 11-20-2008, 10:18 AM
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kevinh kevinh is offline
 
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Originally Posted by Radomir View Post
I've seen it done, but I can see how it could raise some concerns..
Oh! Bending - I was confused about the binding part! I've seen it on a friends RV with many hundred of hours, though I bet you'd want to be careful to have a curved edge on whatever tool you use to bend it.
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  #6  
Old 11-20-2008, 10:41 AM
Camillo Camillo is offline
 
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Yes, bEnding. A little vocal can make a lot of difference...
I bent it gently with a pair of pliers. I did the same for Van's terminal which goes to battery +, as per drawings.
I hope they both will last a few hours...
Thanks.
Camillo
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  #7  
Old 11-20-2008, 11:27 AM
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flion flion is offline
 
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As mentioned, a radius on the bend is necessary. The other factor is support for the cable, which is true even for an unbent terminal tab; they tend to break at the cable side of the tab. After crimping my terminals and making sure they were oriented correctly, I soldered them and made sure there was a well-formed solder fillet (it should be concave, not convex). With that and good support for the cable, I'd not expect it to break.
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  #8  
Old 11-20-2008, 05:38 PM
SteinAir SteinAir is offline
 
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Of course straight is preferred, but the good or bad of "bending" (and how much you can bend it) really can depend on the types of terminals you use. If they are good quality aviation type terminals, they will have a brazed seam and will be of good solid construction. Many auto type terminals are simply folded up tin with no brazed seam...aviation terminals are (or should be) tin coated copper. Quite a lot heavier, a bit more expensive, but all around pretty darned good. I think a lot of people have some small bends in them and I wouldn't get overly concerned about that...you really have 2 layers of metal in the good quality terminals.

My 2 cents!

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Stein
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  #9  
Old 11-20-2008, 06:22 PM
Bob Axsom Bob Axsom is offline
 
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Default One Bend is OK

When I read that you bent the terminal with pliers I cringed a bit because sharp bends and tool marks can lead to cracking over time. If you bend the terminal with some radius in the bent and you do not bend it back (work harden it) I wouldn't sweat it at all. I would never solder the wire to the terminal if I could avoid it (even with SN63 solder, concave fillets and feathered edges to the base metals) because it directly affects the flexibility of the wire in the area where it is most vulnerable.

Bob Axsom
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  #10  
Old 11-20-2008, 07:05 PM
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az_gila az_gila is offline
 
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Smile Stein... is this true for...

Quote:
Originally Posted by SteinAir View Post
...
...you really have 2 layers of metal in the good quality terminals.

My 2 cents!

Cheers,
Stein
...a heavy terminal that goes on the battery (see post #1)?

They really seem to be a single piece of metal to me (AC Spruce terminal)....



This commercial one may be two layers, but it seems to come with a built in stress point where the tube was squished flat....



B&C seems similar to Spruce -

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