Discuss Confused by the shear volume and what to do in the Electrical Tools and Products area at ElectriciansForums.net

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Good morning all,

I mainly work on boiler faults, and repairs. I sometimes have to install wireless thermostats, or renew the fcu switch. I’ve seen a video by an electrician about using a ratchet crimp tool, and a plumber with the same. I’m after some advice as I’m thinking to use bootlace ferrules on the stranded terminals, however, there’s that many to choose from I’m just confused as to what to purchase.

Info received so far: carry on using stranded terminals, purchase an expensive crimp tool with links to expensive tools, search amazon and eBay for approx £12 ones.

I’m one for investing in decent quality, it it’s not my main job, so don’t want to pay extreme amounts either. I’ve seen the ones from TLC, which I may end up purchasing, however would I use all the terminals in the kit?

Anyone got any thoughts on the following?


View: https://www.amazon.co.uk/SWA-RPU-Crimping-Uninsulated-Terminals/dp/B07D5KPT1X


 
TBH a bootlace crimper doesn't need to be top of the line tooling, as long as it forms the ferrule and traps the conductors most things will work. Most screw connections destroy the ferrule anyway.

I have similar to this and it works very well:

 
Without sounding pessimistic, the one @Strima mentioned, I’m concerned it wouldn’t stay on?
Once you have crimped the ferrule it will stay on, I use a similar one and have never had any issues with ferrules falling off.

Ferrules are designed to hold the fine copper strands together so they all enter the termination correctly and as such do not require the same mechanical strength as a through crimp for example.
 
i have one similar to the one strima mentioned.. purrrfick. got it from ebay with 500 assorted bootlace crimps for £20. never use my £50 Klein except for meter seals ( OOOPS I didn't say that, slip of the fingers).
 
Once you have crimped the ferrule it will stay on, I use a similar one and have never had any issues with ferrules falling off.

Ferrules are designed to hold the fine copper strands together so they all enter the termination correctly and as such do not require the same mechanical strength as a through crimp for example.

Sorry to ask, do these do the uninsulated types as well?
 

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