In wiring up my latest build (story coming soon to a forum near you), I discovered the cables going from the DT40 amps to the galvos were a little short on one end. What to do?
I found that my local rental places no longer had cable stretchers available, so step one: contact galvo vendor Dave at LSP. He contacted Dragon Tiger, who refused to supply longer cables, or even connectors and bare wire.
Scrimping and crimping
Dave was able to identify the Molex connector involved (a seven-conductor jobbie), which inspired me to build longer cabling. Below is one man's epic struggle to achieve length.
Wires
There are two cables heat-shrinked together here: a shielded 2 conductor and a shielded 3 wire.
Here is a close-up of the business end of one of the original cables. I stripped the heat-shrink back to verify the drain wire was indeed the cable in the smaller heat shrink here.
The two conductor wire was no problem; I have gobs of shielded 22ga cable left over from my recording studio days. Where to find 3-wire? I spent some time searching eBay and other usual suspects, but the only cable I could find was in 500-ft spools - not good. Finally I found some cheap 4-wire shielded cable at Jameco Electronics, URL below. $7.95 for 25ft - good. I snipped off the un-needed wire and was set to proceed.
Wire Prep
1) carefully measure the length of cable you need and then add an additional inch just in case.
2) Trim the outer insulation back around 1 inch, and prep heatshrink to hold things together and look nice.
3) Insulate the shield drain wire with teensy heat shrink (transparent, in this case, below - black is better).
4) Trim the ends of the other wires back 1/4" or so and tin them with solder, then trim them back a bit more to have just an 1/8" exposed, even across the ends.
This shows the cable on the right ready for crimping - the cable on the left needs a final trim.
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Crimping
Once your wires are prepped, the crimping begins. You need the right tin connectors and an appropriate, expensive ($50), crimper. You might be able to get by with good needle-nostril pliers, but if you are going to be doing this a lot (and you will), you might as well get the right tool for the job (source below).
Here is where some magnifiers will come in handy.
The contacts a small, fiddly, but cheap. Buy extras because you will destroy some as you learn how to do this.
The contacts have two crimp thingies: the front one (toward the round part) is for crimping the conductor, the back one is for crimping the insulation to provide support.
First you crimp the front one - hold the contact in the pliers and gently insert the wire until the end of the insulation is up against the tool, as below:
Gently squeeze down to make the connection. Then move the wire forward into the tool and crimp the rest of the wire, pinching down the insulation in the process:
Your final assembly should look like this:
Here is the completed wiring, ready to slip into the shell:
Insertion
The contacts need to go into the shell so that the barbed "back" of them engages with the holes in the back of the shell. Study the existing cable you have to see how this works. As you push the contacts into the shell, they will make little clicks as the barbs engage in their slots. Test this by gently pulling on the wires to make sure they are fully seated. Make sure you note the color of your wires and put the wires into the shell in the proper order. If you make a mistake, you can gently push the barb on the back of the contact in with a teeny screwdriver while pulling the wire out. Tricky to learn, but it can be done.
Here is a shot of the final products, along with the original cables and the tools used to get the job done:
Sources:
644383 CABLE,SHIELDED, 4 CONDUCTOR 7.95
https://www.jameco.com/webapp/wcs/st...gDrillDownView
Contacts: WM2623-ND
http://www.digikey.com/product-searc...=0&pageSize=25
Shell: WM2617-ND
http://www.digikey.com/scripts/DkSea...34962418502624
Crimp tool:
Molex PA-09
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Engineer-Too...item3a8f88e4e4
I haven't tested this yet: there is a small possibility that the slightly longer wires will screw up some delicate balance of dancing electrons twixt the amps and the mechanics, requiring a massive re-tune of the galvos. I doubt it, but we'll see.
Big thanks to MondoDyne chief engineer Wayne Gillis for providing my crimper and instructing me on all this. And another thanks to Dave at LSP for his excellent service, prices, and continuing support. And a big Phhhhhbpt to DT for refusing to provide help in this.
Hope this helps some PLer down the road.
Lux Plus Esto...Mike