hmm, so there is no way to do it with a caliper?
What do you recommend for cutting them so its easy to make a nice profile? I got a old indent crimper that I want to verify (usually I don't buy old but this one is nice, some kind of amphenol), it does not look ridiculous like the new ones that have a dial on them, it is instead a normal screw, I thought the aviation crimper was some kinda beer opener at first
I have jewelers saw, hack saw, dremel with various disks (abrasive, zicronium super durable abrasive (whatever the 20 dollar disk is that I can plunge into granite and cut steel glued inside), jig saw with metal cutting blade
I am not sure if there is something specific with cutting crimps apart like if some type of cutting action may yank on the wires that are compressed together in some way that distrubs the profile, since these are so tiny with tiny wires.
Then I suppose I lap it on my surface plate and expose it to ferric chloride? How do I hold that steady when its so small? I think I would need a special fixture with a bore in it to put the crimp into then push down on it while I am lapping
I get how it works for a big fat crimp, but this one I am not sure about. I am kind of.. in disbelief that this is the process that a normal small aviation shop goes through to do this.
someone at work actually measured them with a crimp micrometer, at least the normal crimps, but I never ran into this in the wild before, they are not friendly for being belt fed into machines so it was not popular. I only use them for my home solar with the reischsomething green crimp tool, but those are massive and I bought the tool brand new for $$$, and it has to be a improvement over the folded crimps. The solar panel is not exactly an airplane. It also does a single detent at 1.2 tons so I can trust the mechanism more, this one I want to test has 4x detents.
Is everyone just fuckit yoloing this?
What I want to do is put it in the 3 jaw chuck in the proxxon mill with a abrasive blade so I can cut it very flat and hopefully get away with not polishing it. I think a normal milling machine with a thin cut blade would work better though, and leave a smoother finish. I think abrasives might cause the materials to smear, but its the only way I can do it perpendicular. Maybe a fine blade in my mini chop saw?
Is there another way to do this like a big over current or pull test?
This is what I want to use:
https://www.digikey.com/en/product-highlight/h/harwin/datamate-t-contact-female-power-contacts