brittle engine harness connectors

isnms

United States of America
Mar 30, 2005
2,145
0
36
Oklahoma
i80.photobucket.com
FYI
Need to replace any of your brittle engine harness connectors
http://wolferacecraft.com/SearchResult.aspx?CategoryID=82
wpak-03lg.jpg

$5.00
 

SupraMario

I think it was the google
Mar 30, 2005
3,467
6
38
38
The Farm
o hell yea thnx man nice find, i almost was going to electical tape rig something up. woot thnx.
 

Asterix

Lurker of Power
Mar 31, 2005
469
36
28
Vienna, VA
Looks good, but the crimp tool will kill your wallet...

Molex makes good stuff, too, and you can get a cheap "Designer kit" from Digi-key for a whole lot less than that crimp tool costs. Go to www.digikey.com and search for "molex designer kit". The larger one is good for 8 amps or so, so the smaller would probably work fine everywhere. Just be sure to use some waterproof grease since they're not water tight like the stock ones.

If it's not pretty enough for you, Digikey has other choices, though the crimp tools often are way expensive.

Asterix
 

isnms

United States of America
Mar 30, 2005
2,145
0
36
Oklahoma
i80.photobucket.com
Is there any reason this connector would not work in the engine bay to replace cracked and broken connectors?
specifically the O2 sensor

trailer wiring harness
 

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Bishop92t

Supramania Contributor
Apr 18, 2005
773
0
0
USA
www.ma70.com
Those look exactly like the Painless wiring connector I used on my CPS. No special tools were required. Got them from Summit or Jegs pretty cheap. Only thing I didn't like about them was that they had no directions included. The harnesses aren't 100% intuitive as to how to put them together. Once I figured it out it was cake.
 
Oct 11, 2005
3,816
16
38
Thousand Oaks, CA
isnms said:
Is there any reason this connector would not work in the engine bay to replace cracked and broken connectors?
specifically the O2 sensor

trailer wiring harness

Don't use the trailer wiring harness. Those things get intermittent after a few connection cycles, and they don't like heat. Be aware that connector pin materials vary. Auto applications usually go with high copper alloy pin metals for high strength, good thermal and electrical properties, and to resist softening at high temperatures. If you buy generic connectors you will most likely get tin-plated brass that won't stand up to the heat in a car environment for very long. A few connection cycles and you will start having problems.