- Location
- Bountiful, land of rocks
I HATE wiring but it's really not that bad if you take it one thing at a time.
I didn't find that we had one of these thresds but with how much crimping and soldering and such I've been doing on my Buick, I have gained a bit of knowledge. I'm not the biggest fan of soldered connections on a car, especially one that vibrates due to 600+ ft lbs running through it. Small connections I'm fine with but my soldering skills are amateurish. That brings me to crimp connectors.
Not my picture as this image has AC, but I've traced some intermittent issues I'm having to this connection with the help of my Electrical Engineer brother-in-law yesterday. Believe it or not, that's OEM connection on '68-72 Skylarks (other A-body's as well I'm sure) that's been crimped and soldered. My wires have fatigued just outside the soldered connection. I believe I've seen that on the "squarebody" GM trucks as well. So that mean's in my '89 Suburban harness in my Jeep as well. In the case of my car, that connection has lasted 52 years so it's not a horrible idea despite how it looks. I'd also say that the harness in my car has been a bit "molested". That's likely the correct term.
My question/thought is that I believe these connections with heat shrink over the top will be the modern equivalent? Those are about 10 gauge wire, possibly 8 gauge and when combined the yellow butt connector isn't quite the right friend.
For my case, I think I'm just going to buy a new engine harness for this old dawg. I think the butt connector/heat shrink will cover for me in the interim?
Would any folks here have a better solution for such a repair and if so, please share with the class below. Also if you have other tips/tricks/issues maybe this thread can serve as a "go to" library for electrical faux paus/repair?
I didn't find that we had one of these thresds but with how much crimping and soldering and such I've been doing on my Buick, I have gained a bit of knowledge. I'm not the biggest fan of soldered connections on a car, especially one that vibrates due to 600+ ft lbs running through it. Small connections I'm fine with but my soldering skills are amateurish. That brings me to crimp connectors.
Not my picture as this image has AC, but I've traced some intermittent issues I'm having to this connection with the help of my Electrical Engineer brother-in-law yesterday. Believe it or not, that's OEM connection on '68-72 Skylarks (other A-body's as well I'm sure) that's been crimped and soldered. My wires have fatigued just outside the soldered connection. I believe I've seen that on the "squarebody" GM trucks as well. So that mean's in my '89 Suburban harness in my Jeep as well. In the case of my car, that connection has lasted 52 years so it's not a horrible idea despite how it looks. I'd also say that the harness in my car has been a bit "molested". That's likely the correct term.
My question/thought is that I believe these connections with heat shrink over the top will be the modern equivalent? Those are about 10 gauge wire, possibly 8 gauge and when combined the yellow butt connector isn't quite the right friend.
For my case, I think I'm just going to buy a new engine harness for this old dawg. I think the butt connector/heat shrink will cover for me in the interim?
Would any folks here have a better solution for such a repair and if so, please share with the class below. Also if you have other tips/tricks/issues maybe this thread can serve as a "go to" library for electrical faux paus/repair?
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