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I'm working on the firewall forward for my homebuilt.
I need to extend various wires to make it to their respective destinations. (14 to 26 gauge wires.) Any way to have a nice clean butt joint? I don't like the crimp butt joints or twisting the wires together with the accompanying monster bulge. What have y'all used for a central ground or central power point? I'm building a composite so I can't use the airframe as a convenient ground. Suggestions and/or pictures are appreciated. Thanks -- Bart D. Hull Tempe, Arizona Check http://www.inficad.com/~bdhull/engine.html for my Subaru Engine Conversion Check http://www.inficad.com/~bdhull/fuselage.html for Tango II I'm building. |
#2
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![]() "Bart D. Hull" wrote in message ... I'm working on the firewall forward for my homebuilt. I need to extend various wires to make it to their respective destinations. (14 to 26 gauge wires.) Any way to have a nice clean butt joint? I don't like the crimp butt joints or twisting the wires together with the accompanying monster bulge. What have y'all used for a central ground or central power point? I'm building a composite so I can't use the airframe as a convenient ground. Bart -- I'm using these from B&C on my composite project. Look about 1/3 to 1/2 way down the page. Good luck. http://www.bandc.biz/cgi-bin/ez-cata....cgi?26X358218 Fred in Florida |
#3
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![]() "Bart D. Hull" wrote in message ... I'm working on the firewall forward for my homebuilt. I need to extend various wires to make it to their respective destinations. (14 to 26 gauge wires.) Any way to have a nice clean butt joint? I don't like the crimp butt joints or twisting the wires together with the accompanying monster bulge. What have y'all used for a central ground or central power point? I'm building a composite so I can't use the airframe as a convenient ground. Suggestions and/or pictures are appreciated. Use a terminal block, or a Burndy block. Do not solder the wires. |
#4
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On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 07:42:05 -0800, "Tarver Engineering"
wrote: "Bart D. Hull" wrote in message . .. I'm working on the firewall forward for my homebuilt. I need to extend various wires to make it to their respective destinations. (14 to 26 gauge wires.) Any way to have a nice clean butt joint? I don't like the crimp butt joints or twisting the wires together with the accompanying monster bulge. What have y'all used for a central ground or central power point? I'm building a composite so I can't use the airframe as a convenient ground. Suggestions and/or pictures are appreciated. Use a terminal block, or a Burndy block. Do not solder the wires. I've noticed this - why does aviation not solder wires? Is it a reliability thing? Ie the solder joint would fracture after enough vibration and time? With my A&Ps guidance, I've done a bit of wiring under the panel of my plane. One thing is for sure - I wouldn't want to be soldering under there - you'd get a facefull of solder droplets. OUCH! -Nathan |
#5
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![]() "Nathan Young" wrote in message ... On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 07:42:05 -0800, "Tarver Engineering" wrote: "Bart D. Hull" wrote in message . .. I'm working on the firewall forward for my homebuilt. I need to extend various wires to make it to their respective destinations. (14 to 26 gauge wires.) Any way to have a nice clean butt joint? I don't like the crimp butt joints or twisting the wires together with the accompanying monster bulge. What have y'all used for a central ground or central power point? I'm building a composite so I can't use the airframe as a convenient ground. Suggestions and/or pictures are appreciated. Use a terminal block, or a Burndy block. Do not solder the wires. I've noticed this - why does aviation not solder wires? Is it a reliability thing? Ie the solder joint would fracture after enough vibration and time? Solder melts and shorts other things out. With my A&Ps guidance, I've done a bit of wiring under the panel of my plane. One thing is for sure - I wouldn't want to be soldering under there - you'd get a facefull of solder droplets. OUCH! The smell of bunig skin is usually your first indication; followed by cutting your head up trying to escape. ![]() |
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On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 17:07:17 GMT, Nathan Young
wrote: SNIP Use a terminal block, or a Burndy block. Do not solder the wires. I've noticed this - why does aviation not solder wires? Is it a reliability thing? Ie the solder joint would fracture after enough vibration and time? An A&P friend told me that the vibration/fracture answer is the reason. I helped him build a TEAM Minimax and every wire on that thing was mechanically connected and strain-relieved at both ends somehow. It amazed me how much time we spent doing all that to his satisfaction, but I sure learned a lot. Mike With my A&Ps guidance, I've done a bit of wiring under the panel of my plane. One thing is for sure - I wouldn't want to be soldering under there - you'd get a facefull of solder droplets. OUCH! -Nathan Mike Patterson Please remove the spamtrap to email me. |
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On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 17:07:17 GMT, Nathan Young
wrote: On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 07:42:05 -0800, "Tarver Engineering" wrote: "Bart D. Hull" wrote in message .. . I'm working on the firewall forward for my homebuilt. I need to extend various wires to make it to their respective destinations. (14 to 26 gauge wires.) Any way to have a nice clean butt joint? I don't like the crimp butt joints or twisting the wires together with the accompanying monster bulge. What have y'all used for a central ground or central power point? I'm building a composite so I can't use the airframe as a convenient ground. Suggestions and/or pictures are appreciated. Use a terminal block, or a Burndy block. Do not solder the wires. I've noticed this - why does aviation not solder wires? Is it a reliability thing? Ie the solder joint would fracture after enough vibration and time? Yes, for the short answer. As a demonstration, take a piece of aviation wire and cut it in two. Crimp a spade lug on the end of each piece. On one, solder the wire in the connector. Now, bend the wire back and forth. The one soldered into the connector should break far sooner than the one that is only crimped. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com With my A&Ps guidance, I've done a bit of wiring under the panel of my plane. One thing is for sure - I wouldn't want to be soldering under there - you'd get a facefull of solder droplets. OUCH! -Nathan |
#8
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![]() "Roger Halstead" wrote in message ... snip Now, bend the wire back and forth. The one soldered into the connector should break far sooner than the one that is only crimped. Some people would just use a backshell. ![]() Solder is OK as long as there is no way for it to short out other equipment. BCAG uses soldered connector contacts. |
#10
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On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 01:01:44 -0700, "Bart D. Hull"
wrote: Any way to have a nice clean butt joint? I don't like the crimp butt joints or twisting the wires together with the accompanying monster bulge. It's not a cheap solution, but this is a solder sleeve that meets your requirements. As you can see from other posts, the conventional wisdom is to avoid solder splicing, but this particular product includes a controlled amount of solder to prevent wicking beyond the sleeve. Be sure to use the part recommended for the application. http://www.raychem.com/US/datasheets...8/8-6_8-11.pdf Rob- ------------------------------------------------------------------ Robert Cherney e-mail: rcherney(at)comcast(dot)net |
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