- Location
- Tennessee NEC:2017
- Occupation
- Semi-Retired Electrician
What type of solder should be used to solder automotive wiring under the hood of a vehicle? Probably around 18 -20 AWG.
I would STILL solder,crimp and then heat shrink. Is it a fusebile link per chance? Whats it for? I ask because id get the heat/uv shrink, but that might be much.I have to replace a connector and the new one comes with two wire leads and heat shrink, so I know they intend for you to solder it.
Are the rings to solder? How would you get them hot enough?The auto-parts stores carry heat-shrink butt-splices with built-in solder rings.
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Are the rings to solder? How would you get them hot enough?
It's for an Evap purge control valve. The wires broke close to the connector with no room to solder/splice them. The new connector comes with the wire leads already attached to the connector. You just splice them onto the wires where they broke. The valve sits right on top of the engine.I would STILL solder,crimp and then heat shrink. Is it a fusebile link per chance? Whats it for? I ask because id get the heat/uv shrink, but that might be much.
It goes w/o saying, consider one from the dealer then...It's for an Evap purge control valve. The wires broke close to the connector with no room to solder/splice them. The new connector comes with the wire leads already attached to the connector. You just splice them onto the wires where they broke. The valve sits right on top of the engine.
The ram diesels had a bad habit of tearing that fan harness out when the serpentine let go. Nothing wrong with nuts, but now you said so....I put an electric cooling fan on my 77 Dodge pickup. It's connected using... Wire nuts. I put a dab of anti-ox in them. They have been going strong at 25 amps for over 10 years. Just sayin'.
No! Many replacement parts on vehicles need a different connector (parts get superseded a lot), new pigtail supplied with part.It goes w/o saying, consider one from the dealer then...
Yes. Changing critical engine sensors with the usual azone and such never lasts. Especially with ceetain new cars.No! Many replacement parts on vehicles need a different connector (parts get superseded a lot), new pigtail supplied with part.
Crimp is good, IF you can crimp well. Same for solder and heat shrink, you have to do it well. Poor soldering or crimping makes a BAD joint, which will fail. I learned on small wires with .062 60/40 so I do it without turning the wires ANY color! It is practice over many many years. 30 Watt iron? Seems low to me. I use the old Weller 8200 gun. I make new tips from 12 AWG or 10 AWG (whatever I have on hand) solid. BTW, the new 8200 series is CRAP! You want the old one with "tip nuts", not set screws.
And match the crimping tool to the crimp terminal. Or at least use the old "non-insulated" terminal tool and put heat shrink over the whole thing since the indent should pierce the terminal insulation if using this incorrect tool.
I have yet to try the "solder sleeves" style (using a heat gun only), but I hear they work well. Solder and seal in one step, what's not to like?
Oh, you can make your own adhesive style heat shrink. Slice slivers of hot glue and slide them into the heat shrink then heat it up. Works amazingly well!![]()
What type of solder should be used to solder automotive wiring under the hood of a vehicle? Probably around 18 -20 AWG.
Sifting through everything here. Bottom line, electrical solder is tin lead. 63/37 ratio is actually the eutectic alloy, but 60/40 is generally accepted as close enough. The amount of wattage you need depends on many things. Mostly though the mass of the components you are soldering together. Much more than the size of the solder wire in my opinion. The real thing is the result. You want a shiny finish, with smooth flow and you should be able to still see the contours of the wire and the terminal or you have used too much solder. There is one secret toa good solder joint. CLEAN! Don't even straighten out the solder with your fingers it puts oil on the solder.What type of solder should be used to solder automotive wiring under the hood of a vehicle? Probably around 18 -20 AWG.
Ordered from Rock Auto. A bit better than Auto Zone.Yes. Changing critical engine sensors with the usual azone and such never lasts. Especially with ceetain new cars.
But thx for your opnion, it just isnt relevant to my experience.