The Force power
Commander
- Joined
- Feb 3, 2019
- Messages
- 2,349
what size hammer to use?:lol::laugh:
Dad and I have a combined 80+ years of towing.
All on bias ply tires.
All run at max pressure.
Often on 5-8 year old tires.
Only one failure, caused by a nail, which we suspect lowered the air pressure, tire popped off the rim when we hit a set of rough railroad tracks.
This is boring, lets talk about connecting wires together.
Crimp, twist, solder, tape, shrink-wrap, double shrink, adhesive lined shrink connectors.
When I change tires on trailer rims, I use Dawn because it leaves my hands soft and smooth. Something better?
Something much better actually. Have somebody else do it!
I have been crimping and soldering for decades. While it may not be needed, it does seal the joint and prevents corrosion from wicking up the terminal
crimp with correct crimping tool, then solder then adhesive lined heat-shrink in appropriate color. Red for power, Black for ground
I use the appropriate tool setting on the appropriate terminal for the wire at hand
Actually, solder going down the wire strands make is more susceptible to breakage since you now have a solid wire. That's the whole reason you don't want to solder in a high vibration environment. Sam am I's article explains this as well as the one I posted earlier.Agree and also a small amount of solder makes its way into the wire-strands down the wire preventing breakage.
Actually, solder going down the wire strands make is more susceptible to breakage since you now have a solid wire. That's the whole reason you don't want to solder in a high vibration environment. Sam am I's article explains this as well as the one I posted earlier.
Oh my...I guess i'm a little slow today, but finally I figured it out.
If you crimp wires around your chinacrap bias radial tires you can put any pressure in that you want and you won't have a problem.
Why didn't y'all just splain it in the first place. We could have ended this thread in the 2nd page instead of running its course in the the 5th.