Crimping dupont connectors

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 21 лип 2024
  • In this video I show you how to make dupont connections easily. The key is to have the proper tools and practice a little bit. After 1-2 failed attempts you will master this technique and you will be able to make custom cables with dupont connectors. It is very useful if you are working a lot with microcontrollers or similar circuits because this is one of the most popular way to connect the different devices.
    For detailed pictures, visit my website: curiousscientist.tech/blog/cr...
    Please don't forget to subscribe!
    If you want to support my work, please consider buying the parts using my affiliate links:
    curiousscientist.tech/tools
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 49

  • @DennisMurphey
    @DennisMurphey Місяць тому

    It did help me i struggle with the right orientation and good fit for my Model Trains. I use these types of connectors to make my harness to conness the tender and the engine digital stuff. Usually 6 or 8 wires but a nice plug and harness make it so e much easier to route and manage. Thank You so much. Now I am working on an ESP3266 install for Wireless WiFi and PWM DC Motor control. I have the fan smoke and chuff sound synchronized,, All wheel pick u at the tender, digital sounds and LED lights. Wanting to go wireless with real slow motion and buttons for Steam Whistle. Its my retirement hobby. With 3D Printer and DIY Mini Mill I am a pig in you know what! Great video as usual. Dennis

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  Місяць тому +1

      Thank you! I am glad that the video was useful for you! I have videos on PWM DC motor projects, if you're interested, check my channel! Cheers!

    • @DennisMurphey
      @DennisMurphey Місяць тому +1

      @@CuriousScientist I will. I am having some tricky issues with reliability. WiFi here I suspect.

  • @bssgkmsd8
    @bssgkmsd8 3 роки тому +1

    There are many dupont videos on UA-cam. This one is by far the best.
    Thank you for making this VERY informative video. It really helped me. 👍

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  3 роки тому

      Thank you very much! I am really happy that you found it helpful!

  • @CraftySven
    @CraftySven 3 роки тому +2

    very helpful, thank you

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  3 роки тому

      You are welcome! I am glad that you found it helpful!

  • @isidoromaich7226
    @isidoromaich7226 3 роки тому +1

    Yes the more important tool is the crimper but even more important is the quality of his die set; thankfully this part is changeable.
    The 50% of quality rely on the tool used the other 50% is all about skills, so I encourage everybody to practice a lot.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  3 роки тому +1

      Totally agree! I actually have another crimping tool and I have a bunch of dies with it for different connectors. It really worth the investment, your cables and connections will be thankful. When I bought this tool, I messed up several crimps and I still mess it up sometimes as the video illustrates. Practice, practice, practice...! :)

  • @dickvancampen3318
    @dickvancampen3318 2 роки тому +1

    Great experience thanks 😊👍

  • @BrandonGraham
    @BrandonGraham 3 роки тому +3

    Is there a reason to use solid core over stranded? This process seems a little easier when working with stranded wire.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  3 роки тому +2

      There's no specific reason, other than this cable was right next to me, so I picked this up for the demonstration. In fact, stranded wires, especially those with the silicone insulation tend to be much more flexible. So, if you need the flexibility, go for the stranded one, if you need rigidity, go for the single core cables. I also prefer the stranded wires with the silicone insulation.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo Рік тому +1

      There’s rarely a reason to use solid wire in electronics. In the distant past, stranded wire was much more expensive than solid, so in static applications, we used solid. But the cost advantage has shrunk a lot, and stranded is more tolerant of vibration and flexing and is easier to work with, so it’s used almost exclusively now.

    • @meisievannancy
      @meisievannancy 3 місяці тому

      You have to use finely stranded purer copper wire in machines where there is a lot of flexing otherwise the cables break internally. Solid is only for cables that don't move once installed.

  • @NeverTalkToCops1
    @NeverTalkToCops1 Рік тому +3

    Dupont connectors with the staggered triangular insulation wings require a round die, not a "w" shaped die.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  Рік тому +1

      Thanks! Seems like that the crimper I use is not the "official" Dupont crimper, but a "Dupont" crimper. Everywhere I see these on shopping websites, they refer to them as Dupont crimping tool. You are not the first (and probably not the last, haha) person to point the differences out. I will keep this in mind thanks!

    • @paddyg24
      @paddyg24 4 місяці тому +1

      @@CuriousScientistThe crimper they are referring to is model SN-025 - Made in the same factory in China as the SN-28B you are using here just has a different die set in them.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  4 місяці тому

      @@paddyg24 Thank you very much for the explanation as well as for the model numbers!

    • @meisievannancy
      @meisievannancy 3 місяці тому

      ​@@paddyg24The numbers 25 and 28 refer to 2.5mm and 2.8mm. Most people in the planet don't know what AWB and SWG means anymore and use mm.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  3 місяці тому

      Thanks, this is very useful!

  • @PatriotaMex
    @PatriotaMex 2 роки тому +1

    Hi! what is the perfect wire to these type of connectors?

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  2 роки тому +1

      Hi! After drawing further conclusions after making this video, I would use stranded wire, probably 28 or 30 AWG. Especially those with the silicone insulation. They are heat resistant and very flexible.

    • @PatriotaMex
      @PatriotaMex 2 роки тому +1

      @@CuriousScientist thank you very much!

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  2 роки тому

      You're welcome! Cheers!

  • @iceberg789
    @iceberg789 2 роки тому +1

    you can just do it with nose pliers. but it will not be as fast.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  2 роки тому

      Yes, it can also work. But it is much better and comfortable with a dedicated tool.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo Рік тому +1

      Just to be clear: no, you can’t actually do it properly with normal nose pliers. Crimping is actually a precision process that forms a cold weld, and this requires a careful balance of enough pressure to form the cold weld, but not enough to damage the conductor. You cannot do this with ordinary pliers, as the lever ratio doesn’t enable you to apply enough force.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  Рік тому

      Yes, this is actually a very good remark. I guess iceberg789 only referred to a "just fine" solution to have the terminal connected to the wire. But of course if you would want to go for a professional solution, a dedicated tool is needed.

  • @StahLHerZRocK
    @StahLHerZRocK Рік тому

    oh my god... sorry, but wtf are you doing? its crimper not for dupont. just check HT-95 (AWG 22-32), HT-102 (AWG 22-32), HT-73 (AWG 18-20) and other.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  Рік тому

      This tool works fine with JST and dupont contacts, so I don't know what's your problem. If you want to correct me or anything, I am totally okay with it, but you can do it in a less condescending way as well. ;)

    • @StahLHerZRocK
      @StahLHerZRocK Рік тому +1

      @@CuriousScientist less condescending its IWISS SN-025. Sorry, but you inserted an wrong crimped dupont on the video thumb and talk about a good crimper. this is a very common mistake. you should research the theme before talking about it. Dupont wings must not pierced into the wire insulation(JST - yep, but not dupont)

  • @woopsserg
    @woopsserg 2 роки тому +7

    Your crimps are garbage because you used a wrong crimping tool for Dupont, a very common mistake. Most of the cheap crimpers which are described to be suitable for Dupont connectors are anything but. Crimp around insulation shouldn't look anything like this, It should nicely wrap around the insulation, not squashed in the middle. You can google IWISS SN-025 to see how a proper crimping die should look like. The same as this tool on wire crimping side and round on insulation side.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  2 роки тому +2

      Thanks, these are the comments that I am looking for: constructive criticism! I will look up the mentioned document and if I find a tool with a good price, I might make another iteration of this video. Cheers!

    • @woopsserg
      @woopsserg 2 роки тому +1

      @@CuriousScientist I also just noticed you crimped a single strand (solid) wire, which is a big no-no. Reliable crimps are not possible with this type of wire. Only multi-strand wire must be used for the vast majority of crimps, with some rare exceptions designed specially for solid wire.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  2 роки тому

      I only had that kind of wire, so I used what I had. Nowadays, I use a silicon insulated stranded wire. In fact, the crimping works/looks much better on these wires.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo Рік тому +1

      @@woopsserg Crimping solid wire isn’t quite as big of a no-no as many people think, but you’re correct that most crimp contacts are designed for stranded only.

    • @woopsserg
      @woopsserg Рік тому +1

      @@tookitogo It is a big non-no, since solid wire will not hold well enough in such connectors. It likely will work for some time but if there is any movement or vibration, very likely wire will dislocate from such crimp. If you really need to use solid wire with unsuitable crimp connector, just solder it. It will be 100 times more reliable.

  • @meisievannancy
    @meisievannancy 3 місяці тому

    Only Americans know what "dupont" means. Most other countries do not use that term.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  3 місяці тому

      I think in electronics, dupont, as a connector type, is widely known. Otherwise, it could also be the famous chemical plant that, for example, invented Teflon and other materials. :)

    • @meisievannancy
      @meisievannancy 3 місяці тому +1

      ​@@CuriousScientist Never heard it used in my country. Even English countries outside USA don't use a brand name. In fact that brand may be available in my country but it's really not used by anyone. Mostly roll over or fold over for un-insulated terminals is the term I've heard. I've seen videos from England and they don't use the term either in my observation.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  3 місяці тому

      I saw it somewhere when I started to get more into electronics (more specifically, Arduino stuff) and it got stuck. I won't change it now, it is too late. 😄

    • @meisievannancy
      @meisievannancy 3 місяці тому

      ​@@CuriousScientist Haha. Ok. No problem. I don't think they know what to call them here. Some guy told me it's a Molex connector. 😅

  • @brucekarpe1759
    @brucekarpe1759 2 роки тому

    Useless. I couldn't get even one connection to work after watching this video.

    • @CuriousScientist
      @CuriousScientist  2 роки тому +1

      Interesting, I made most of my dupont connections myself and all my electrical circuits are running fine. Maybe the problem is not in the video. :)

    • @brucekarpe1759
      @brucekarpe1759 2 роки тому +1

      @@CuriousScientist Actually, the wires I'm trying to connect are probably too thin. I'm trying to connect duponts to a 1.25mm connector. The wires are #30 or higher. Also, the tabs should be crimped on the insulation before inserting into the crimping tool. Still, I only get about 1 in 10 to hold.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo Рік тому +1

      @@brucekarpe1759 Crimping is a precision process that requires careful matching of wire, contact type, and crimp tool. The mechanical tolerances involved are surprisingly tight, and with tiny connectors like 1.25mm pitch, it gets even more critical. A crimp tool for DuPont (which 99% of the ones sold “for DuPont” actually are not!!) is much too large for a 1.25mm pitch contact. The crimp dies for 1.25mm contacts are _tiny!_
      If you mean that you need DuPont contacts onto 30AWG wire: this is possible, but not with a standard tool. (Most of the aforementioned bad DuPont tools struggle to crimp 24AWG reliably, so hopeless on thinner wire.) Additionally, the contacts themselves are different: the ones for thin wire have smaller crimp tabs. I own a “real” ($450) crimp tool for dupont-like contacts, and with it, I can reliably crimp onto 30AWG, because it has three positions in the die, one of which is for 28-32AWG. If you value your sanity, I highly recommend picking up a proper tool: with patience and luck, you can buy them on auction or classified sites for pennies on the dollar. (I got my $450 tool on the local classifieds for $60 shipped, brand new.)
      “Insulation tabs should be crimped first” - No. With a proper ratcheting crimp tool, you do not pre-crimp anything, it’s a one-step process.