I am using OSE 8mm connectors. They are high quality and definitely do not spark. The downside is that they are VERY difficult to disconnect. My understanding is that this is true for all 8mm connectors. Has anyone found a way to make disconnecting more easy? Thank you for any suggestions.
Disconnecting OSE 8mm connectors
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I put it on the metal part of the connector, the electric grease does not eliminate your point of contact. Now if you took an undersized connector and tried to “fill the gaps” with the grease then it wouldn’t work because of it not being conductive but on the right size connectors you only get a light film of grease on there and your points of contact are not hindered in anyway.Comment
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Alternate solution, after soldering many of them, I found that the heat does spread the contacts a little more than standard.
You can use needle nose pliers and slightly squeeze on the male and put the prongs closer together. If you go too far, you can use a screwdriver and bend them back out.
Only very small adjustments are needed.Comment
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The "squeeze" trick works well, I do it on a lot of the Castle 6.5mm bullets, but as mentioned, do it with the idea of putting a little pressure on the points, and not actually trying to bend things. It doesn't take much, and if you make the connection too loose, you will dramatically increase resistance which causes heat and can even un-solder the connector in some cases.
I use the OSE 8mm anti-spark connectors on all of my 6S packs. It takes a hot iron, with a lot of of heat capacity to solder them on quickly and cleanly. If you apply heat for too long, with an under powered iron, you will melt the plastic housings and can cause misalignment of the metal connectors inside the housing. The anti-spark plastic rings in the female connectors can also get deformed from too much heat. When I solder on a new connector, I attach it's counterpart to keep the metal connectors aligned and add thermal capacity. In some cases, I grab the exposed tip of the other end of the connector with a needle nose pliers to act as a heat sink. Heat soak is the enemy of those connectors.Last edited by fweasel; 07-19-2022, 07:33 PM.Vac-U-Tug Jr (13mph)Comment
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