I second ntcnico’s advice, and here’s why: closed-barrel terminals are a bit less fickle about the tool used.
But no matter what, crimping is always a thing that requires a good match of terminal, wire, and tool. You can’t fudge it or you end up with poor crimps that will fail, and in the case of high-current connections, could lead to fire.
Curiosity: The SN crimpers have a seemingly wide choice of jaws that can be interchanged. Is there a complete list of the jaws anywhere?
I have never found a comprehensive list. Some AliExpress vendors have large lists that come close, though. However, the
quality of the information in those lists is highly questionable, since the Chinese routinely suggest crimp tools for terminals they are categorically incompatible with.
Was it originally a design from a specific manufacturer that's now become "generic"?
Some years ago, I came across what I believe was the source of the original designs of the SN-28 and SN-48 tools. But I stupidly didn’t save it, and I have been unable to locate it since. But the -28 referred to 2.8mm spades (Faston), -48 to 4.8mm spades.
The SN and HS style handles are fundamentally the European designs, afaik. It wouldn’t surprise me if they originated with Pressmaster or something. But we’d have to do some serious digging in old patents to find out.
Question: I'm looking to be able to crimp these 30A round lug terminals. The seller pointed me to the HS series crimper with the 2030A jaw. I'm assuming this jaw won't fit a SN crimper.
It won’t, they’re a totally different die size. But even within one size of jaw, the dies aren’t entirely consistent, so you may run into incompatibility between manufacturers. (I have.) It’s frankly easier — and often only slightly costlier — to buy a whole new tool.
I was hoping to find a pair of SN jaws that could crimp these without needing to buy yet another crimper.
Even if you could find SN jaws for that terminal, you probably wouldn’t want to: that size and type of terminal requires a lot of force to crimp, and the SN tool’s short-handle design means you need a lot of hand force. The larger HS style tools are easier on the hands for larger terminals. However, if you get the closed-barrel terminals ntcnico and I both recommend instead, you could get an SN-06 indent die. (The indent style concentrates all the force on a small area, so you don’t need as much force as it takes to fold in an open-barrel crimp.)
I'm aware of Matt Millman's excellent page on all things "Dupont" crimper, I'm not sure if there is anything similar for a wider variety of crimp types?
Not really. He has other pages covering a few other types of crimps.
At these currents, you don't want to take any chances. Especially if this is for a commercial project.
It is 12V automotive use. Hobby.
The voltage isn’t the issue, it’s the high current. If you actually need the 30A, then you can’t fuck around with the crimp, as you could cause a fire. In a commercial product that becomes a liability, but even for a hobby, causing fires is really something you don’t want.
If you don’t need the high current, and just selected that lug due to its hole dimensions, then there are better solutions (lugs with large holes, but for small wire).
If anyone can answer the questions asked (versus ones not asked) I'd appreciate it.
That isn’t a good attitude to have, for two reasons:
1. People ask and suggest things with good reason. They may know things you didn’t know to ask, but that you really do need to know.
2. It comes across as entitled. This is a public discussion forum, not a paid tech support consultancy. You do not get to dictate the direction the discussion goes. It’s OK to ask people to answer residual unanswered questions, but it’s not cool to tell people not to add info you didn’t ask for.