A guide to bootlace ferrule crimps has been added, click here.

A guide to bootlace ferrule crimps has been added, click here.
Aussie Made No 11: Enerdive are based in Queensland. While some products are sourced from overseas, Enerdrive does manufacture its own range of ePOWER AC battery chargers & DC2DC battery chargers along with their Lithium battery systems: https://enerdrive.com.au/
Aussie Made No 12: Austech Wire & Cable make copper cables for automotive, marine, speakers, irrigation, etc. Automotive cables are sold at retail under the name Owl or Wise Owl on eBay: https://austechwire.com.au/#about
Aussie Made No 13: Tycab Australia’s cable products are used across a broad range of industries, from Automotive, Irrigation, Building, Data & Instrumentation to Security, Marine, Welding, Speaker & Audio and Switchboards. I have used their automotive cables and they are world class: https://www.tycab.com.au/
Aussie Made No 14: SmartBar was the original lightweight plastic bullbar built to absorb an impact and bounce back into shape. They are much more pedestrian friendly in an accident. I have one installed on the Patrol. There is a variety of bars now called SmartBar, StealthBar and SpartanBar: https://smartbar.com.au/
Aussie Made No 15: Rhino Rack makes a vast array of roof racks and accessories right here in Australia. The Patrol has a Pioneer Platform fitted with jerry can holder and spare tyre carrier: https://www.rhinorack.com.au/en-au
Note: crimping steps and tips are at the bottom of the page.
The Doc had an issue with the passenger’s side blinker on the Nissan Patrol not working properly and had to redo the crimps. That is when the problems started. He bought the crimps from SuperCheapAuto, which in small qualities are very expensive. He was crimping the terminals using pliers and the results were poor: wires slipped out of the terminals, the terminals were flattened rather than crimped and the end result was not weather sealed. The Patrol does water crossings so weather sealing is a must have.
Frustrated with substandard results, The Doc went to YouTube and stumbled on a crimping guide from EricTheCarGuy. The video is fantastic. Taking onboard Eric’s advice to buy the right tools The Doc bought a self-adjusting wire strippers, a racketing crimper, shrink tube and redid the job like a pro! Thanks Eric.
The Doc then moved to the Patrol’s driver’s side and redid those crimps. The crimps now look better than factory. No issues with these crimps over the last 3 years.
The Doc just carried on crimping. Over the last few years, The Doc has learned more and identified a few pitfalls.
If you are in a hurry to crimp, go down to the heading Crimping tips.
This Guide is about crimp terminals commonly used for automotive, marine and caravan use. Common terminals include spade, bullet, ring, fork and butt splice terminals. Spade and bullet terminals have a male and female counterpart. Ring and fork connectors are used with bolts or battery terminals and are often held in place with a tightened nut. Butt slice terminals join two pieces of wire.
There are many other crimps including T-tap connectors, flag terminals, Piggy Back terminals, Deutsch connectors, etc. which will not be discussed.
Terminals commonly come in three sizes red (AWG22-16), blue (AWG16-14) and yellow (AWG12-10). Or small (red), medium (blue) and large (yellow). AWG stands for American Wire Gauge.
With AWG ratings, the higher the number, the smaller the wire diameter. Red terminals handle wire 0.5 to 1.5mm in diameter, blue 1.5-2.5mm and yellow 4-6mm.
Crimp terminals often come in two broad varieties:
Insulated terminals have plastic or some other insulator on the hollow end of the terminal. Non-insulated terminals do not. This Guide focuses on insulated terminals. A non-insulated terminal can be insulated by using shrink tube. Shrink tube can be single or dual wall (see below).
Tip: the dye used in a racketing crimper will vary depending on whether the terminal is insulated or non-insulated. Ensure you use the right dye (a dye is the set of jaws used to complete the crimp).
Most terminals over AWG12-10 are non-insulated and are known as “copper cable lugs.” You insulate these lugs after they have been crimped, using single or dual wall shrink tube. Tip: silver lugs are commonly tin-plated copper, to help reduce corrosion. A copper cable lug looks like this:
There are two types of shrink tube:
Single wall shrink tubing is just a plastic tube, which shrinks when heat is applied. The tube will say 2: 1 or more commonly 3:1. Which means when heat is applied the tube will shrink to one-third if its original size, 2:1 shrink tubing reduces to half its original size.
Dual wall shrink tube has an outer plastic wall and an inner wall of glue (polyolefin). When applying heat, the plastic shrinks and the glue melts to form a good seal. When done correctly, the seal will not only be insulated but also waterproof and dustproof. It is the obvious choice for marine use. Tip: dual wall crimp terminals may be called adhesive lined terminals.
Once heat treated single wall shrink tubing is more flexible than the dual wall shrink tube (because of the layer of glue in the dual wall shrink tube). Only dual wall shrink tubing gives you a waterproof seal. Tip: the cheapest way to buy tubing is to purchase dual wall clear, then the tubing can be used with any colour wire. Otherwise you need matching colours for a variety of wire diameters, which will cost more.
Use an electric/butane heat gun to shrink the tubing and melt the glue. The Doc applies heat until he can see the crimp seal onto the wire and a little glue comes out of each end of the tubing (see video here). Tip: apply the heat evenly over the shrink tube.
Lighters and matches are not ideal heat sources as they do not apply heat evenly. The Doc uses an old heat gun intended to peel paint. In the field, he takes a Dremel VersaTip, an all in one soldering iron, heat gun and sealing tool. He also uses it to make his own bootlaces!
Using quality terminals, copper wire, shrink tube and a good crimping technique are all important to ensuring reliable current flow in your electrical system (and minimise any risk of fire). The Doc buys quality terminals (Taiwanese where possible) and Australian made Wise Owl (made by Austech Wire & Cable) or Tycab copper wire – often from PX Wholesales, Connector Tech ALS, Tinker Wholesale, Autoelec or Brillante Sales. For marine use buy tin plated copper wire.
Cheap Chinese rubbish on eBay just causes problems. The Doc says do it once and do it right.
Excellent quality dual wall shrink tube is bought from Rhino Tools and some single wall shrink tubing from eBay. Tip: buy clear tubing if the crimp needs to be inspected.
Cheap crimps, poor crimping technique, crappy copper wire (the wrong size or low quality) and loose fittings all adversely affect your ability to charge and discharge your battery properly. More here.
The Doc started by using the older style insulated crimps that have plain plastic insulation; they look like this:
The Doc bought a 540 piece kit from eBay for under $50. Tip: buying small quantities of terminals can be very, very expensive from places like SuperCheapAuto (like $16 for twenty bullet terminals).
Doing more research, The Doc discovered terminals with dual wall tubing, giving waterproof connections if sealed correctly. After more work he bought a 540 piece Wirefy terminal kit. The metal terminals were of good quality (tin coated copper), with quality dual wall insulation and a good variety of terminals in different sizes. He also bought quality butt splices from Rhino Tools. The Wirefy insulated crimps look like this:
Buying the larger size kits like the 540 piece Wirefy saves money. The Doc divided the terminals between himself, his brother and nephew – we all get a selection and a big cost saving.
Wirefy must be bought overseas and with the exchange rate dropping Wirefy are now expensive. Wirefy terminals are tin coated copper, rather than the cheaper and less conductive tin coated brass. The Doc did find a reasonable equivalent on eBay here (they are not as good as the Wirefy). Warning: The prices on Amazon and eBay over the last twelve months has risen around 60%.
The Doc’s first choice for most jobs are the Wirefy or Rhino terminals and the older style are often used for practice crimps. Dual wall terminals are more expensive, but if the budget does not stretch you can still get great results with older style terminals sealed with quality dual wall shrink tubing.
Warning: over time the unsealed older style terminals permit corrosion around the terminal and wire. The Doc has replaced older terminals on the Nissan Patrol because of this, with newer sealed terminals.
If you need commercial grade crimp terminals look at Parnell’s website. They have a mind-numbing assortment of crimps. If you have very precise terminals needs ozautoelectrics can help, but often at a high price.
You will need:
The best stripper for the DYIer is probably the Irwin Vise-Grip 2078300 Self-Adjusting Wire Stripper, costing around $30 in Australia. Cheaper crimpers look like the Irwin, but many are of poor quality. A quality wire stripper better than the Irwin is the Klein Tools 11063W Katapult Wire Stripper, costing around $45.
Self-adjusting wire strippers do an excellent job, but both the Irwin and the Klein Tools stripper struggle with thicker wire diameters (like 6B&S and 8B&S). Both will strip the insulation, but the cut is not clean as the insulation is torn.
When using a wire stripper, you must avoid:
Tip: The Doc bought a $10 co-axial cable stripper off eBay for thicker wire. Using the single adjustable blade, he scores the insulation without cutting into the copper wire, then he uses the Irwin to finish the job. It gives a much cleaner result than using the Irwin alone. Warning: if you cut too deep into the insulation while scoring you risk cutting or nicking the copper wire, hence the two-step process. The $10 co-axial cable stripper looks like this:
The Doc uses a Sherman S&G Tool Aid 18960 Quick-Change Ratcheting crimper, see here. It has several quick-change dyes for different terminals. It is easy to use and completes excellent crimps. The Doc bought his on Amazon US but it is getting hard to source it lately.
Rhino Tools based in Australia has another great choice. You can just buy the crimper and then purchase the dyes you need. There was a choice of 25 dyes last time The Doc counted, see here.
The Doc has used Rhino Tools several times, they offer quality products at a competitive price. You save time and money because Rhino only sell quality crimpers, terminals and dual wall tube.
You need more leverage to crimp the larger copper cable lugs and the lugs in an Anderson plug. The Doc uses the 1.5-16mm OPT Crimper for those. The Doc does enough crimping of these larger lugs to justify the purchase. The occasional crimp can be handled by the S&G Tool Aid 18960. Tip: see The Doc’s Guide on Anderson Plugs here.
There are special considerations when crimping with thinner wires, like those used to wire up a box trailer. When the insulation is stripped, the wire is so thin it can be damaged when securing it in the trailer plug. The screw flattens the wire out and damages it. Using a bootlace ferrule around the wire before it is screwed down helps greatly.
There are insulated and uninsulated bootlace ferrules. An insulated bootlace ferrule looks like this:
Using a bootlace ferrule holds all the wires together and ensures a secure connection. Bootlace ferrule crimpers come in four or six sides. The six sided or hex crimper gives a better crimp as the four sided crushes the ferrule on the four corners.
Tip: hex crimpers are good up to 6mm diameter ferrules, any bigger and you will need a four sided crimper. If you have quick-change style crimper like the S&G Tool Aid 18960, see if a dye is suitable for bootlace ferules. The dye will crimp the bootlace ferrules differently to the four and six sided crimpers.
The Doc went to AliExpress and bought $50 worth of non-insulated bootlace ferrules (he already had insulated ones) and made his own bootlaces using paracord. Two pairs of OEM bootlaces including postage cost $45, so The Doc just bought some paracord and made his own for about $2 a pair (saving over $20 a pair). The savings paid for the ferrules and paracord rather quickly. The savings also paid for the bootlace ferrule crimper he already had and was using on thin wire.
Tip: if joining two wires of different sizes the bootlace ferrule can increase wire diameter of the smaller wire to ensure a proper fit into the butt slice terminal. You can also use paracord and ferrules to hang pictures on the wall – a ferrule secures each end of the looped paracord. The Doc and his brother like to find new ways to use paracord and ferrules.
Trivia: uninsulated metal bootlace ferrules were originally used on shoe and boot laces, before the newer style plastic crimps came into use. Which is why these terminals are called bootlace ferrules.
The Doc has found a good crimp sealed with dual wall tubing works for Outback travel. Australia’s notorious corrugations can break solder. Good crimps last longer than solder. Decide what works for you.
Trivia: the military standard requires both soldering, crimping and some fancy wire twisting.
Some suggestions on getting good crimps:
The initial cost of the tools can be expensive, but they will give you a lifetime of service. One job The Doc did on his car, meant the tools paid for themselves. The Doc’s nephew worked on his Hilux and saved around $2,000 in labour costs wiring up a solar panel, dual battery system, multiple lights, etc. That is a lot on money saved because he had the right tools and crimp terminals. He has probably used more of The Doc’s crimps than The Doc has!
If money is short or you want to minimise your spend, here is The Doc’s crimping poverty pack.
Wire stripper: Irwin Vise-Grip 2078300 Self-Adjusting Wire Stripper. Must have.
Crimping Tool: Rhino Tools Automotive Crimping Set, then you could buy extra crimp dyes when needed. The Irwin Vise Grip has a basic manual crimper if your budget cannot stretch to a racketed crimper. A racketed crimper is worth the extra, they give professional grade crimps.
Heat source: any old heat gun can be used to shrink tube. If you do not have one, use as lighter or a heat source that will give even heat around 100C. The melting temperatures do vary between brands of tubing.
Clear Dual Wall Shrink tubing: Taiwanese made is best. It can be used any coloured wire minimising your spend on tubing. Clear dual wall tubing is available at PSG.
Crimps: buy old style crimps off eBay, saving you money. Using dual wall shrink tube means you can seal the old style crimp. Personally, I would buy some Wirefy dual wall crimps, but that costs more. Tip: you can get good results with old style crimps and cheaper single wall shrink tubing, but the seals are not waterproof.
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