petersonra
Senior Member
- Location
- Northern illinois
- Occupation
- engineer
So, we had a meeting and decided it would be a good idea to use flexible wire for the larger wires in our control panels. UL now allows us to use ferrules to terminate them without having to worry about whether the terminal is designed for fine wire or not.
A pretty handy thing for larger wires.
So I look at the most common wires we would use hem on. It turns out it would likely be 350 and 500 kcm.
So off I go to talk to the various vendors of ferrules and tools to crimp them on.
For whatever reason, many of the ferrule manufacturers do not make ferrules over 350 kcm. So, they go off my list.
None of them seem to make a decent tool but recommend various other manufacturer's tools for the purpose.
So, I get me a couple bags of sample ferrules of various sizes and invite various tool salespeople to come in with their ferrule crimping tools to demonstrate them.
First in comes Panduit about 3 weeks ago. Their tool goes up to 400 kcm. Makes a really nice crimp. You have to run it through the electric tool twice, but it comes out nice. But, no 500 kcm die.
Next in comes Burndy about 2 weeks ago. They have a range taking tool which is slick since you can cheat if you have to on the ferrule size. Makes a serious crimp. I crimp a ferrule onto a 350 and bring it out to the shop. The crimped on ferrule will not go into the terminal on the Cb that is designed for 500 kcm wire. The tool deforms the ferrule and makes it much wider. Salesman says - we have a different tool that will not make it as wide.
Burndy comes back today. The 4 nib tool makes a squarish crimp instead of a triangular crimp, but it also makes the ferrule too big for a 350 wire with ferrule to fit into a terminal designed for 500 kcm wire.
Greenlee is coming in Friday. I am hoping their tool will actually work.
One would think that the guys that design these tools would have realized this issue with ferrules and dealt with it somehow.
I can get the uncrimped 350 ferrule into the lug designed for 500 kcm wire.
A pretty handy thing for larger wires.
So I look at the most common wires we would use hem on. It turns out it would likely be 350 and 500 kcm.
So off I go to talk to the various vendors of ferrules and tools to crimp them on.
For whatever reason, many of the ferrule manufacturers do not make ferrules over 350 kcm. So, they go off my list.
None of them seem to make a decent tool but recommend various other manufacturer's tools for the purpose.
So, I get me a couple bags of sample ferrules of various sizes and invite various tool salespeople to come in with their ferrule crimping tools to demonstrate them.
First in comes Panduit about 3 weeks ago. Their tool goes up to 400 kcm. Makes a really nice crimp. You have to run it through the electric tool twice, but it comes out nice. But, no 500 kcm die.
Next in comes Burndy about 2 weeks ago. They have a range taking tool which is slick since you can cheat if you have to on the ferrule size. Makes a serious crimp. I crimp a ferrule onto a 350 and bring it out to the shop. The crimped on ferrule will not go into the terminal on the Cb that is designed for 500 kcm wire. The tool deforms the ferrule and makes it much wider. Salesman says - we have a different tool that will not make it as wide.
Burndy comes back today. The 4 nib tool makes a squarish crimp instead of a triangular crimp, but it also makes the ferrule too big for a 350 wire with ferrule to fit into a terminal designed for 500 kcm wire.
Greenlee is coming in Friday. I am hoping their tool will actually work.
One would think that the guys that design these tools would have realized this issue with ferrules and dealt with it somehow.
I can get the uncrimped 350 ferrule into the lug designed for 500 kcm wire.