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Crimping vs. Solder
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<blockquote data-quote="yacob.naif" data-source="post: 2349844" data-attributes="member: 565696"><p>ya, i'm personally still gonna get an iron, if not for butt splicing, for fixing broken terminals/etc. that cannot be crimped</p><p></p><p>i just found the article interesting</p><p></p><p>and imo, a good crimp is a lot harder to obtain than a good soldered joint, and since a GOOD crimp and a BAD crimp look IDENTICAL, it's a PITA to have to guess whether or not it's going to stay together</p><p></p><p>but supposedly a GOOD crimp IS more durable than a good soldered joint</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="yacob.naif, post: 2349844, member: 565696"] ya, i'm personally still gonna get an iron, if not for butt splicing, for fixing broken terminals/etc. that cannot be crimped i just found the article interesting and imo, a good crimp is a lot harder to obtain than a good soldered joint, and since a GOOD crimp and a BAD crimp look IDENTICAL, it's a PITA to have to guess whether or not it's going to stay together but supposedly a GOOD crimp IS more durable than a good soldered joint [/QUOTE]
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