Amazon Heads-Up : SN-02BM Chinese Crimpers & Connector Kit
While looking for JST-SH connectors to make up a few cables for my new PC case project ( I was planning to do it the hard way with pliers and soldering), I discovered this kit on Amazon.ca for ridiculously cheap (Cad$42/US$35):
https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B082234HSS/
Over 2000 pieces of Chinese clone JST-XH connectors and 0.100" "Dupont" connectors along with a crimper that looks suspiciously well-made in the photos. So I decided to take a gamble; what arrived was much better quality than expected. Plier body plates meet well without slop, it has adjustable tension, the dies are made of ground steel rather than sintered metal, and as you can see, they meet very precisely.
I made up a few small speaker wires with JST-XH for a project; all crimped successfully with zero grief. The crimps are all tin-plated brass; I scraped the coating off to be sure. The "Dupont" crimps are obviously also cheap clone bits as well; they don't have the long diagonally meshing crimps over the insulation like real Dupont ends have, but rather are shorter and probably designed for this type of crimper. When I get to that part of the project I'll report back on how they turned out.
https://www.amazon.com/Hautton-Crimping-Terminal-Ratcheting-Connectors/dp/B083DRCFRY
This particular kit does not appear to be available on the US site; however they do appear to offer similar kits under other "brands". The key search term appears to be SN-02BM , the model number of the crimping pliers. They also appear to have a cousin, the SN-28B , made for larger non-insulation crimp connectors as we commonly use in automotive applications with ring, spade & bullet connectors.
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=SN-02BM&ref=nb_sb_noss
Bottom line is that I probably wouldn't use these crimps for anything mission-critical; but the crimpers are definitely much better than the price, and for random connector stuff to knock a project together quick at low cost, I think the entire kit's a positive winner all the way around.
mnem
*toolish ol' dwagon*
Promised Followup: Cheap Chinese Crimpers from AmazonSo today I finally got back to "The Sleevening" on my new Gaming PC box, and I had to make up a couple "Dupont" connectors. Here's what I found:
Okay... right out the gate, not most promising.
With the other side as far back as it can go in the outer dies, the inner conductor dies don't cover the entire inner crimp region. So much for my supposition that these crimps were made to match this type of crimper.
However; otherwise the crimps do fit well, and are easy to get aligned properly, just like the crimps for the JST-XH connectors. Trick is to get it in the slot, then bring the jaws closed to the point where the tabs bottom out in the throat of the die, then go just one more ratchet click; this starts the crimp so they're nice & round and easy to get the wire in. You can feel it bottom out, and see the strands in place on the other side of the die. Here I've sacrificed one for science to demonstrate.
However, as you can see in the previous image and here, the too-narrow dies cut the inner conductor crimp a little. This does not look good; however the successfully crimped portion is ~1.6mm of 2.5mm possible. When I tried to pull it apart, the crimp cut a bit out of my skin but did not come even a bit loose in either the conductor or insulation crimp regions; I'm going to say that's still a serviceable crimp.
So just when you think things might be okay... the finished crimp doesn't quite fit in the Dupont shell.
However, this is easily fixed. Just the slightest little bit of a squeeze with some flat-jawed pliers on the insulation crimp...
...and it slides right in. No other fiddling to the body or the inner conductor crimp is necessary; and yes, it does "float" inside the shell like it should so the contacts can self-align against the pin.
And now it's time to move forward with "The Sleevening"; while it clearly does not crimp the "Dupont" connectors perfectly, and an extra step is needed to make it fit in the shell properly... I still feel that this is an all-around excellent value at this price.
Unlike the myriad horror stories of failed crimp after fail with other similar crimpers, these have yielded a successful crimp every time with zero fails and zero fatalities (so far... knock on wood
), so I'm going to stick with them until such time as I have my workbench back.
mnem
Stay hungry, stay foolish.