Thanks for the tips but I've probably crimped more pins than you've had hot dinners.
In fact thinking about the number of telco racks I cabled back in the PDH days I'm sure that I've crimped more coax connectors than I've had hot dinners.
Then why the reluctance to use JST-XH? They're a known quantity, and hard to fuck up. Or is it the fact of only having detent retention, not having a latch? Did I miss that?
mnem
*toddles off to search for furnace filters*
There's no reluctance to using a crimp connector, the reluctance is to using a crappy crimp connector.
Header pins are easy to damage.
Header and receptacle are hard to align when inserting, almost impossible to insert blind.
A remarkably small quantity of "brute force and ignorance" needs to be applied while inserting the receptacle the wrong way around to damage or destroy the whole connector.
Pin and socket alignment is haphazard, not positively aligned.
Receptacle is hard to grip when extracting. There's only 3mm of receptacle exposed and the bit you grip is < 1mm tall and is the same width as the shroud. Fine perhaps for a Japanese woman's fingers, not for mine, BD would be well fucked. You end up gripping the shroud with more force than the receptacle - you're trying to pull the header out of the solder rather than pulling on the receptacle.
Extraction force is relatively high for the type of connector.
They turn into a pile of slag if you get hot air anywhere near them - not a great idea on an SMD board you might need to rework.
Actual crimp contact area with cable is less than 1.5mm long and way too short widthways to reliably wrap the whole wire bundle.
I really can't think of anything good to say about them other than they're cheap and ubiquitous.
So when you said they were "loathed in here"... you were including yourself in that, but also trying to look at it from without at the same time...?
I don't know how to answer that except to respond from experience with them I didn't really have a choice aboot.
I didn't say anything aboot crimp connectors in general; I was talking aboot JST-XH in particular. I know there are lots of cases where crimped cables simply are better, provided the crimping is done correctly. For making lots of connections, they are the only way to get through some projects without losing your mind from the drudgery of soldering a gazillion tiny connectors. You get to a point where it is likelier to fuck something up when soldering, and that has to be considered too.
I've literally been using them for decades in my RC gear; partly because everything comes with them, and changing to another connector would void any chance of warranty, but also because they get the job done. They are ubiquitous for a reason and they hold up much better in real world use under repeated mating cycles than they should.
Nobody here has digits bigger or fatter than those on my big old hamhands; I handle the finished product without problem, as well as assembling them. Quite frankly, I prefer working with the crimps on these to those for DuPont connectors; they're easier to get in the crimper straight, and they're not nearly so finicky aboot an oversized wire.
If you need to solder near them on a PCB, the entire shroud can be slid up off the pins; sometimes this is a weakness as I have pulled the damned thing off a few times unintentionally. I will agree that it takes some care to not destroy them taking them apart and putting back together when they are new and tight, but if you do take care they still make reliable contact even after they work in.
You are making a choice for something that doesn't have to match a de facto standard as is the case with balance connectors, so I get wanting to go for something better. But for putting a lot of moderate current capacity connectors in a small footprint on a PCB, they're pretty hard to beat without getting into stuff so small you need to handle the bits with a magnifier and hemostats.
But hey... you've probably made more such connectors than I've seen (rare enough that I can say that; usially it's me saying it to someone else
), so I'll defer to your superior experience.
It's just that IME, they aren't
that horrible. I'd rather work with them than almost anything FPC or insulation-displacement, for example.
mnem
*toddles off to make some more wrong connectors*