My $60, 16 ton Chinesium crimper has worked flawlessly to be honest. If you really want to test that Temco crimper to see if it’s creating a proper cold weld you have to cut the lug in half after you crimp it. If the wire and the lug look like a solid piece of copper it’s doing it’s job correctly.
my friend bought a set of these, i've used them, they work just fine, and you don't need an extra set of hands, unless you've just got really small hands.... if you just let it lightly clamp onto the lug, put the wire in and hold it, and then pump it with your other hand... easy peasy... also his has never leaked or had any issues you've mentioned.
I got a TemCo - TH0006 v2 5-Ton Hydraulic Crimper & it has been excellent for three years straight. It crimps a hexagon pattern & is makes the most solid crimp possible. I would not trade it for any other crimper on the market. It also came with replacement o-rings & a 1 year no fault return guarantee if you are not satisfied with there product. TemCo makes excellent products & they cost more but you certainly get what you pay for with there products.
I have the cheap yellow crimper. I must have an updated version. The dies are in gauge and held in with magnets. I haven’t noticed it leaking and have had good luck with it so far. My only complaint is the handle is not spring loaded return. Does make it difficult to operate especially in tight spaces. But that Temco is super cool. No dies. Looks like a much better tool.
it's how all generic random brand chinese stuff are. Nothing related to updated versions. Same designs come out of multiple factories, multiple lines. Some have terrible QC and design, others are much better. No real way to figure out if two different tools are same unless the thing has a stamp on the tool itself, even same packaging or branding might have tools from two different companies with tons of differences.
Solar guy and electric tinkerer here, great review of these guys. I've used cheap hydraulic tools before and I'd rather use a hammer or my 20 ton press to crimp than a leaking hydraulic crimper. Great video! Thanks for bringing this to our attention.
@@gottliebdee263 Yeah, those hammer assist crimpers. I’ve been forced to use a large flat tip or tent stake and a hammer when I was in Iraq. What’s possible and what’s preferred are occasionally not the same.
I have heard different reviews on that yellow crimper, I have and use the yellow crimper, and has worked excellent for me especially if you crimp the lug , midway then crimp the rest of the lug making a level crimp. Also noticed that some yellow crimpers come defective from factory... So it's a mixed bag with the yellow crimper, on the Blue crimper, don't like the single round punch in the middle at all, I seems to have a lesser contact with the wire. Compared to the double crimped wire from the yellow crimper, that I have crimped, with no room for any air, but super entombed to the Max. Maybe it's just me , and I am using extra force, But to each their own... But whatever anyone uses, always try to do the best you can with what you have or prefer.. Enjoy your videos DIY..👍💯
I love my TEMCo TH0034 12ton. Granted its big and heavy but it will do up to 4ga to 750mcm. The TEMCo products are very similar to the GreenLee brands that are rather expensive. The changing of dies can suck, however I found that you're only swapping them a few times per build. Also something not aware to many with any dies from any manufacture is that the actual lug that you're using matters the most. A 1/0 lug from many different brands will usually have a different outside diameter of the lug (though typically the inside diameters are fairly similar). This is why you get flanges/wings after a crimp due to the lug being usually too large for a specific size and typically doesn't happen with a quality lug that would be used in something such as commercial wiring. So if you find a brand of lugs you like you should just always use said brand and not buy just whatever. Not to mention most those dies that come with those cheap hydraulic crimpers that are in a yellow or orange case are not the actual correct size dies that they claim to be and are usually off one way or another. Also you should never use a hydraulic crimper to crimp an open end split style non lug terminal because that split in the terminal will not allow the actual metal to hold that force which is why most people solder them.
@@DIYAudioGuy Yea, they are so cheap and flimsy, even the nicer brand ones are fairly horrible imo! I was just putting the info out there though because I've seen people try to crimp that style a lot not knowing any better.
I bought this same cheepo crimper about 5 years ago. It has performed flawlessly through hundreds of stainless steel on stainless cable fencing. the dies make a much stronger connection than a single point dimple. This wouldn’t matter electrically but for strength it maters. Put a little sticky grease on and it won’t fall off.
I found a nice manual crimper on Amazon and it works fine . iCrimp IWS-0810N Battery Cable Terminal Lug Crimping Tool . It crimps 2 thr 8 . The bigger the lug the more it takes to crimp but I don't use it every day.
I have the same yellow lug crimper. While I do hate it because it's cumbersome and hard to use, it doesn't leak and has magnets that hold dies in place. You received a bad unit probably should have sent it back. Glad you found something better though that one handed operation looks amazing I would love having one that is capable of that. Maybe one day. At this point can't justify the extra price to replace one. Mine has been working great for years and I'm guessing I will see many more years of use out of it but once it starts leaking it's gone. At that point maybe I'll get one of those fancy battery operated ones or a pneumatic crimper.
Yep the hammer style definitely works great. I have one of these and its nice to crimp ends when the large wire is still on the unit...I work on semis.
Temco makes good tools, but I personally like the hex style crimp better. Yes, you need dies, but the end result is both stronger and looks much better. And the tool only costs a little more than the indent style.
I own the yellow one and your review is spot on I dread using it, I spend more time filing the sharp edges than actually crimping, unfortunately it looks like both of the ones you reviewed suck
I really like my "inexpensive" 8 tonne crimper, it looks exactly like your leaky one Justin, mine came with buna and silicone (white?) o-rings to service it but they haven't been needed yet. personally, i'm not a fan of the finished result of those wedge style crimpers, same for hammer crimpers i'm sure they work but the aesthetic isn't there.
Spot on, those YQK 70 are garbage on so many angles, you said most of them. That Temco is ca $125 vs $25. The Hydraulic pump is useful (will add a spring to the handle. It must be held in a vice or you need OH their as well) I am tryin to machine up some of my own suitable anvils, so I may get some reliable joints
I own the same crimper... I noticed in the intro that you are pushing WAY too hard on the handle. The jaws are already closed as far as they will go... no need to keep pumping harder it will only blow the seals in the crimper. My crimper came with an extra set of seals. I learned this the hard way myself. Also if you get a loose crimp just use the next size down.. it will squeeze some copper out the sides but you can break that off with a set of needle nose and cover it with heat shrink. I get bulletproof crimps with the same exact crimper... rock solid crimps. WAYYY better than a hammer. Like I said the only reason its leaking is because you are wrenching down on it too hard... you dont need to go past the point where the jaws are closed. thats all. and the pumping should be very easy. In fact the pump looks the same on the blue one just a different head.
Very nice. Mine is similar to the yellow one. It does have awg on one side of the dies and hasn't leaked yet, but I definitely agree with the other issues you mentioned
As cool as the + and - are on the "die" you shouldn't ever see it. You should have Marine Grade heat shrink Edit: lol I guess you would mention that later
Would of been a humorous moment had you started the vid while wearing a Hifi Vega Crimpin' Ain't Easy T-Shirt. 😆 This kind of specialty tool can be a valuable addition if you do a lot of cable work for gear...
My stash of old stinger "fold-up connectors is getting really low. Those things were great, set of multi grips or adjustable pliers was all you needed. Gold plated and came with red or black sleeve to cover crimps. Don't see them on other cars much. Maybe they were expensive? Can't remember.
I love my Temco double stanchion .. I do wish it had round dies as well as hex, for doing hourglass ferrules on wire-rope and other stainless cable ends. I suppose some spare hex dies could be converted to rounds.. 👍😎✊
I have one of these (harbor freight model) and absolutely love it! A tip for using these: Insert the lug and crimp down until it just holds firm or barely starts crushing the lug, after that you can firmly insert the wire while finishing the crimp. Much easier to position the terminal end however you want, lock it in place, and then have a free hand to hold the wire! This allows you to produce a more clean factory looking crimp with the wire sheath remaining tight against the lug end, which also gives a bit more rigidity against bending. If you're like me and just buy a spool of wire regardless of color, this is how I quickly determine my grounds vs my hots, as I don't bother shrink-wrapping my grounds. Just about every exposed metal surface in a vehicle ties to chasis ground, heck even your ignition cylinder ties to ground! Just a nice little tidbit if you do a lot of changes, or temporary removal for space, etc...
That is a good tip, when the generic yellow / harbor freight versions add the spring to the handle I'll switch to them. But that spring makes a world of difference.
@@DIYAudioGuy that sucks. I thought about maybe trying to make my own, problem is finding the right die set. In the world of automotive there are so many different manufacturers of ring terminal lugs and they're all different sizes
Is the yellow one that $70 harbor freight crimper? I got a scissor type crimper, cuz I couldn't hammer crimp stuff in my car (talk about a pain in the butt lol) but the $25 Amazon scissor one (like hifi Vega used) sucks too. I may actually buy that temco one lol. Like u said tho, we deal w the bs cuz we don't use it too too often.🤷♂️
Wow those are some ugly crimps. You don’t get those “wings” with a die crimper if you use the appropriately sized dies with the correct termination lug. I’ll take the die style over the ones with the pokey bits any day of the week. As far as those cheap yellow ones go, the “heavy duty” version with the fully caged dies is far superior to the open face style. Of course any crimper sucks when you use those cheapo split barrel terminal lugs or those flimsy ones made out of flattened copper pipe. Zinc plated cast copper with heavy wall closed barrel lugs are the only way to go. I prefer the ones made by Quick Cable.
You either got a dud or blew the seal by continuing to pump once the dies had met; there's a reason the chinesium ones come with a spare set of seals. Sorry but the crimp from that TEMCO unit looks substandard to me, not much better than the shade-tree mechanic hammer-die style. My yellow crimper has been perfect so far if not oversized for what I need (larger cage style YQK-120, 10-120mm^2)
Problem with chinese one, the dies are very soft and the shafts tend to flare after a while getting stuck into the press. did work well until that happens, so buy something with hardened steel dies
Totally disagree with this!!!! Usually I'm right there with you, and your spot on with your reviews but not this one. I have the orange Amazon one for 46$ and it's my favorite wire tool. My dies came with metric stamped on one side and awg gauge on the other, and they never fall out, actually it's kinda tough getting them seated. Also mine doesn't leak, and the flanges it leaves on smaller gauge wire go right away with a simple 180° rotation and another light crimp. I think you just got a bad one, the second I seen it leaking from the package I would've returned it for a different one. Only thing I do agree is getting your lug lined up with one hand....but I found that sitting down and resting it on your thigh, while crimping with one hand, and holding the lug with the other is best.
I have used one of these Chinese crimpers for years, it's crimped about 2000 Stainless wire balustrade's without a problem, never leaked, I must admit longer handles would make it easier, I think you're being a bit over dramatic about this, the Chinese ones also come with spare O ring kits if they every blow.
You are using way oversized lugs for the cable. I also see you are using split lugs which should be crimped with another style of die, which resembles a W shape to bring the split ends into the cable.
@@DIYAudioGuy I would still like to see a video about termination using solder pucks and torches. I see heavy gauge wire handled this way by diesel mechanics and think it would translate to car audio. Certainly, if it is strong enough for a Caterpillar dump truck then is adequate for a 1/2 ton pickup. In addition, the solder puck is just a dollar and once melted there are no gaps at the connection. I might be missing something, but your videos are thought out and logical - you seem like the perfect person for the topic.
You got a defective one .Mine came with extra orings that I've never had to use , never added oil, and never had die falling out and had both American and metric on it it's a few years old.
I have the temco unit with die set. These are nice but I don't like the crimp it makes. For high amp solar applications that single touch "spot" weld if you will could create a hot spot. Dies are a pain to work with but in the end I think you end up with a better crimp.. TH0006 v2
Im on my second day of using this yellow crimper with a different brand name but its the same. TRASH! I have to size down the dies to get a secure hold then grind off the sharp edges left behind so they don't cut my heat shrink. So i guess im not the only one struggling and wasting time with this hunk of junk...thanks for the video
My $60, 16 ton Chinesium crimper has worked flawlessly to be honest. If you really want to test that Temco crimper to see if it’s creating a proper cold weld you have to cut the lug in half after you crimp it. If the wire and the lug look like a solid piece of copper it’s doing it’s job correctly.
my friend bought a set of these, i've used them, they work just fine, and you don't need an extra set of hands, unless you've just got really small hands.... if you just let it lightly clamp onto the lug, put the wire in and hold it, and then pump it with your other hand... easy peasy... also his has never leaked or had any issues you've mentioned.
I got a TemCo - TH0006 v2 5-Ton Hydraulic Crimper & it has been excellent for three years straight. It crimps a hexagon pattern & is makes the most solid crimp possible. I would not trade it for any other crimper on the market. It also came with replacement o-rings & a 1 year no fault return guarantee if you are not satisfied with there product. TemCo makes excellent products & they cost more but you certainly get what you pay for with there products.
Cool!
I have the same one and share your opinion, it’s awesome!!
thank you for this comment, i am actually about to buy one.
I have the cheap yellow crimper. I must have an updated version. The dies are in gauge and held in with magnets. I haven’t noticed it leaking and have had good luck with it so far. My only complaint is the handle is not spring loaded return. Does make it difficult to operate especially in tight spaces. But that Temco is super cool. No dies. Looks like a much better tool.
it's how all generic random brand chinese stuff are. Nothing related to updated versions. Same designs come out of multiple factories, multiple lines. Some have terrible QC and design, others are much better. No real way to figure out if two different tools are same unless the thing has a stamp on the tool itself, even same packaging or branding might have tools from two different companies with tons of differences.
Solar guy and electric tinkerer here, great review of these guys. I've used cheap hydraulic tools before and I'd rather use a hammer or my 20 ton press to crimp than a leaking hydraulic crimper. Great video! Thanks for bringing this to our attention.
Thanks for watching.
A hammer?
SMH…….
@@gottliebdee263 Yeah, those hammer assist crimpers. I’ve been forced to use a large flat tip or tent stake and a hammer when I was in Iraq. What’s possible and what’s preferred are occasionally not the same.
@@neogator26 Yes, but this a completely different game in that case.
I have heard different reviews on that yellow crimper, I have and use the yellow crimper, and has worked excellent for me especially if you crimp the lug , midway then crimp the rest of the lug making a level crimp. Also noticed that some yellow crimpers come defective from factory... So it's a mixed bag with the yellow crimper, on the Blue crimper, don't like the single round punch in the middle at all, I seems to have a lesser contact with the wire. Compared to the double crimped wire from the yellow crimper, that I have crimped, with no room for any air, but super entombed to the Max. Maybe it's just me , and I am using extra force, But to each their own... But whatever anyone uses, always try to do the best you can with what you have or prefer.. Enjoy your videos DIY..👍💯
Right, you never know what you are going to get.
@@DIYAudioGuy yes sir!! 👍💯
I used mine a lot and haven’t had any issue with the crimper. But the dies are a pain and they do crimp the lug funny.
I love my TEMCo TH0034 12ton. Granted its big and heavy but it will do up to 4ga to 750mcm. The TEMCo products are very similar to the GreenLee brands that are rather expensive.
The changing of dies can suck, however I found that you're only swapping them a few times per build.
Also something not aware to many with any dies from any manufacture is that the actual lug that you're using matters the most. A 1/0 lug from many different brands will usually have a different outside diameter of the lug (though typically the inside diameters are fairly similar). This is why you get flanges/wings after a crimp due to the lug being usually too large for a specific size and typically doesn't happen with a quality lug that would be used in something such as commercial wiring. So if you find a brand of lugs you like you should just always use said brand and not buy just whatever.
Not to mention most those dies that come with those cheap hydraulic crimpers that are in a yellow or orange case are not the actual correct size dies that they claim to be and are usually off one way or another.
Also you should never use a hydraulic crimper to crimp an open end split style non lug terminal because that split in the terminal will not allow the actual metal to hold that force which is why most people solder them.
Those split style terminals are included in most amplifier kits. I've almost completely stopped using them.
@@DIYAudioGuy Yea, they are so cheap and flimsy, even the nicer brand ones are fairly horrible imo! I was just putting the info out there though because I've seen people try to crimp that style a lot not knowing any better.
Greenlee makes the best ones if you really need it a lot it's worth looking into.
I bought this same cheepo crimper about 5 years ago. It has performed flawlessly through hundreds of stainless steel on stainless cable fencing. the dies make a much stronger connection than a single point dimple. This wouldn’t matter electrically but for strength it maters. Put a little sticky grease on and it won’t fall off.
I found a nice manual crimper on Amazon and it works fine . iCrimp IWS-0810N Battery Cable Terminal Lug Crimping Tool . It crimps 2 thr 8 . The bigger the lug the more it takes to crimp but I don't use it every day.
I have the same yellow lug crimper. While I do hate it because it's cumbersome and hard to use, it doesn't leak and has magnets that hold dies in place. You received a bad unit probably should have sent it back.
Glad you found something better though that one handed operation looks amazing I would love having one that is capable of that.
Maybe one day. At this point can't justify the extra price to replace one. Mine has been working great for years and I'm guessing I will see many more years of use out of it but once it starts leaking it's gone.
At that point maybe I'll get one of those fancy battery operated ones or a pneumatic crimper.
Mine was a dud for sure. The spring loaded handle on this one made it a LOT easier to use.
TemCo is a brand name and so it's not surprising it did far better than the old crimper you had. I still use my hammer crimper--it gets the job done.
It has already made my life easier.
Yep the hammer style definitely works great. I have one of these and its nice to crimp ends when the large wire is still on the unit...I work on semis.
Temco makes good tools, but I personally like the hex style crimp better. Yes, you need dies, but the end result is both stronger and looks much better. And the tool only costs a little more than the indent style.
I own the yellow one and your review is spot on I dread using it, I spend more time filing the sharp edges than actually crimping, unfortunately it looks like both of the ones you reviewed suck
I bought the harbor freight version of this. I was using it last night thinking everything you said here. Thanks for the good video.
That is about what I expected.
My yellow one of these I’ve used for 7 years or so without an issue
Pretty sure mine was a dud, but the TEMCO was worth every penny.
I really like my "inexpensive" 8 tonne crimper, it looks exactly like your leaky one Justin, mine came with buna and silicone (white?) o-rings to service it but they haven't been needed yet.
personally, i'm not a fan of the finished result of those wedge style crimpers, same for hammer crimpers i'm sure they work but the aesthetic isn't there.
I have noticed that some of the yellow ones listed on Amazon now include o-rings.
So how many tons are needed in a crimp? How do you choose?
Spot on, those YQK 70 are garbage on so many angles, you said most of them. That Temco is ca $125 vs $25. The Hydraulic pump is useful (will add a spring to the handle. It must be held in a vice or you need OH their as well) I am tryin to machine up some of my own suitable anvils, so I may get some reliable joints
I own the same crimper... I noticed in the intro that you are pushing WAY too hard on the handle. The jaws are already closed as far as they will go... no need to keep pumping harder it will only blow the seals in the crimper. My crimper came with an extra set of seals. I learned this the hard way myself. Also if you get a loose crimp just use the next size down.. it will squeeze some copper out the sides but you can break that off with a set of needle nose and cover it with heat shrink. I get bulletproof crimps with the same exact crimper... rock solid crimps. WAYYY better than a hammer.
Like I said the only reason its leaking is because you are wrenching down on it too hard... you dont need to go past the point where the jaws are closed. thats all. and the pumping should be very easy. In fact the pump looks the same on the blue one just a different head.
Thanks for the tip.
You helped my decision within the first 10 seconds😂
Very nice. Mine is similar to the yellow one. It does have awg on one side of the dies and hasn't leaked yet, but I definitely agree with the other issues you mentioned
Sounds like a good tool.
Temco sells a crimper with dies. It's basically the same tool as that one, but with dies for about 150$
They have several different styles.
Get your crimper here: TemCo Crimper: amzn.to/42JWQoC
As cool as the + and - are on the "die" you shouldn't ever see it. You should have Marine Grade heat shrink
Edit: lol I guess you would mention that later
Yep, a cool feature that nobody will ever see.
Greeting from North Wales Uk. I was considering getting one of these yellow ones but i wont bother now. Thanks for the video
👍
Every time I break out the hydraulic crimper I get tourette's.
😎
I'm not sure if the strands of wire next to the indents get fused. Try cutting some cross sections, and make a video please
Would of been a humorous moment had you started the vid while wearing a Hifi Vega Crimpin' Ain't Easy T-Shirt. 😆
This kind of specialty tool can be a valuable addition if you do a lot of cable work for gear...
Next time!
Baba FTW ❤️
🤣
@@bobbybyrkett7751 That’s Baba 101 Bobby B 😁
Props for buying quality equipment. They have been on my wishlist for a while now. I'm looking at the 175$ kit
I've reached out to TemCo to see if they'd be interested in sending me a few samples to review. I have not heard back from them yet.
My stash of old stinger "fold-up connectors is getting really low. Those things were great, set of multi grips or adjustable pliers was all you needed. Gold plated and came with red or black sleeve to cover crimps. Don't see them on other cars much. Maybe they were expensive? Can't remember.
Cool.
I love my Temco double stanchion ..
I do wish it had round dies as well as hex, for doing hourglass ferrules on wire-rope and other stainless cable ends.
I suppose some spare hex dies could be converted to rounds.. 👍😎✊
They have some other crimpers, one of them might do the trick.
Were you specifically offered the dies in AWG? were they metric by default?
I have one of these (harbor freight model) and absolutely love it! A tip for using these: Insert the lug and crimp down until it just holds firm or barely starts crushing the lug, after that you can firmly insert the wire while finishing the crimp. Much easier to position the terminal end however you want, lock it in place, and then have a free hand to hold the wire! This allows you to produce a more clean factory looking crimp with the wire sheath remaining tight against the lug end, which also gives a bit more rigidity against bending.
If you're like me and just buy a spool of wire regardless of color, this is how I quickly determine my grounds vs my hots, as I don't bother shrink-wrapping my grounds. Just about every exposed metal surface in a vehicle ties to chasis ground, heck even your ignition cylinder ties to ground! Just a nice little tidbit if you do a lot of changes, or temporary removal for space, etc...
That is a good tip, when the generic yellow / harbor freight versions add the spring to the handle I'll switch to them. But that spring makes a world of difference.
I've owned and used the yellow one for years. Mine hasn't leaked and has worked great, I just crimp extra hard when using it
i want a battery operated hex crimp version of this. the only ones i can find are like 4 grand tho. have you ever found one for cheaper?
I have not found an affordable one.
@@DIYAudioGuy that sucks. I thought about maybe trying to make my own, problem is finding the right die set. In the world of automotive there are so many different manufacturers of ring terminal lugs and they're all different sizes
Not cheap but worth it!
Buy once
Cry once!
True.
Is the yellow one that $70 harbor freight crimper? I got a scissor type crimper, cuz I couldn't hammer crimp stuff in my car (talk about a pain in the butt lol) but the $25 Amazon scissor one (like hifi Vega used) sucks too. I may actually buy that temco one lol. Like u said tho, we deal w the bs cuz we don't use it too too often.🤷♂️
It came from amazon. It was probably less than 40 bucks.
Wow those are some ugly crimps. You don’t get those “wings” with a die crimper if you use the appropriately sized dies with the correct termination lug.
I’ll take the die style over the ones with the pokey bits any day of the week. As far as those cheap yellow ones go, the “heavy duty” version with the fully caged dies is far superior to the open face style. Of course any crimper sucks when you use those cheapo split barrel terminal lugs or those flimsy ones made out of flattened copper pipe. Zinc plated cast copper with heavy wall closed barrel lugs are the only way to go. I prefer the ones made by Quick Cable.
Just one of the reasons why that yellow crimper is garbage.
You either got a dud or blew the seal by continuing to pump once the dies had met; there's a reason the chinesium ones come with a spare set of seals.
Sorry but the crimp from that TEMCO unit looks substandard to me, not much better than the shade-tree mechanic hammer-die style. My yellow crimper has been perfect so far if not oversized for what I need (larger cage style YQK-120, 10-120mm^2)
Thanks god bless
Yea i bought the same pair be for i got the th1818
Problem with chinese one, the dies are very soft and the shafts tend to flare after a while getting stuck into the press. did work well until that happens, so buy something with hardened steel dies
I use the temco hammer crimper. I love it
I have not tried a hammer crimper.
@DIY Audio Guy it works well. I usually set it on solid concrete floor for best reaults
@@DarrinLintz710 I love mine.
Totally disagree with this!!!! Usually I'm right there with you, and your spot on with your reviews but not this one. I have the orange Amazon one for 46$ and it's my favorite wire tool. My dies came with metric stamped on one side and awg gauge on the other, and they never fall out, actually it's kinda tough getting them seated. Also mine doesn't leak, and the flanges it leaves on smaller gauge wire go right away with a simple 180° rotation and another light crimp. I think you just got a bad one, the second I seen it leaking from the package I would've returned it for a different one. Only thing I do agree is getting your lug lined up with one hand....but I found that sitting down and resting it on your thigh, while crimping with one hand, and holding the lug with the other is best.
Yes, I did get a dud.
I have used one of these Chinese crimpers for years, it's crimped about 2000 Stainless wire balustrade's without a problem, never leaked, I must admit longer handles would make it easier, I think you're being a bit over dramatic about this, the Chinese ones also come with spare O ring kits if they every blow.
I have noticed that most of them do come with an O-ring, this one did not, and it was leaking on day one.
If it was leaking when you bought it why didn't you return it?
I did not realize the problem until after the return window.
You are using way oversized lugs for the cable. I also see you are using split lugs which should be crimped with another style of die, which resembles a W shape to bring the split ends into the cable.
I hate split lugs.
Liked the video!
Thanks!
@@DIYAudioGuy I would still like to see a video about termination using solder pucks and torches. I see heavy gauge wire handled this way by diesel mechanics and think it would translate to car audio. Certainly, if it is strong enough for a Caterpillar dump truck then is adequate for a 1/2 ton pickup. In addition, the solder puck is just a dollar and once melted there are no gaps at the connection. I might be missing something, but your videos are thought out and logical - you seem like the perfect person for the topic.
Can you do a diy stripper pole build video ?
You got a defective one .Mine came with extra orings that I've never had to use , never added oil, and never had die falling out and had both American and metric on it it's a few years old.
That's why I bought the blue one.
I bought a crimping tool that looks just like that. Same problems
However mines crimps nice and even, not like your new crimper. It reminds me of hammer style crimp.
"anything like me I work alone..... " No say it isn't so
I broke mine immediately and returned them lol
Can you just use electrical tape to hold the lug to the wire while you pump it 😅
That would work.
BUY ONCE CRY ONCE THATS WHAT I DID TEMCO
I'm kind of paranoid i crimp and solder
I have the temco unit with die set. These are nice but I don't like the crimp it makes. For high amp solar applications that single touch "spot" weld if you will could create a hot spot. Dies are a pain to work with but in the end I think you end up with a better crimp.. TH0006 v2
Cigar cutter to strip wire. You're welcome.
I’d have returned it if it leaked out of the box.
TEMCo DIELESS INDENT LUG CRIMPER TOOL Electrical Battery Terminal Cable Wire
best type hands down
It is definitely my new favorite tool.
send them old ones to ,e i need something anything
Im on my second day of using this yellow crimper with a different brand name but its the same. TRASH! I have to size down the dies to get a secure hold then grind off the sharp edges left behind so they don't cut my heat shrink. So i guess im not the only one struggling and wasting time with this hunk of junk...thanks for the video
I hate to hear that.
Nuthing good is cheap and nuthing cheap is good🤟😎👍
That crimper makes ugly crimps just get the amazon $30-50 hydraulic crimpers they do a much better crimp
I will never buy one of those $40 crimpers from Amazon ever again.
You need the crimper that Steve Meade uses! The one from Milwaukee.
Milwaukee is very proud of their tools!
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Is this a paid review?
Nope, I bought this crimper with my own money. If it were a paid review TH-cam would give you a little notice at the beginning of the video.
You bought the right brand, but the wrong style. Hex crimper is much nice than indent crimper.
I'm very happy with the one I have.
@@DIYAudioGuy Didn’t suggest you shouldn’t be happy. Just pointing out that hex is superior for those who have yet to buy a tool.
"But they're metric"
No, they're correct.
If it does not fit the wire then it is not correct.
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wow, this is an ad
Not really
@@rkzooplays LIKE YES
Due to the wearing of the gloves you no longer have ANY credibility whatsoever
Ugh. AWG. What a travesty.
Cheap, stylish and useless, both!
Tengo uno como el amarillo y me ha funcionado perfectamente
Hexagonal crimp is better