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Jumper Cables A Jumble Of Compromises

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
I've had an unused 30 feet of 4 AWG DLO cable sitting around for a number of years. I have decided to make jumper cables. DLO cable is the thickest and toughest insulation of them all and the conductor is double thickness tin-plated rope stranded. The cable is too heavy for me but put to commercial use, with super quality ends (clamps) they should be a forever set of commercial jumper cables.

But I'm going to ask for advice from folks who have made up their own cables recently.

Since the wire stranding toll is to be squashed then soldered about the only stuff that is concerning is the fastener that holds the cable wire to the jaw clip. I will use 8awg silicone wire as a jaw to jaw shunt.

The pesky huge spring will have to be pried open and the cable slipped beneath by a friend younger and stronger than me.

Have you encountered super clips on the market?
12 REPLIES 12

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
I gave 1/2 of a set of jumpers to Celsi. From a jumper connected to a group 4 3-cell truck battery to a six inch wilton vise. It's for soldering starter motor leads with 100% lead which must be used in starters. I have the other ten feet which also have cheap copper coated steel parrot jaw clips. He has a pair of carbon 1/4" rods. The soldering is direct to the huge field coil steel starter case.

This is how I soldered the 350MCM lugs so many years ago in the gen shed. 350 MCM is a bit less than twice the size of 4/0 cable.

The wire in the small cable is authentic pure copper high strand count 8AWG. It was not easy nor cheap to find on eBay.

After modifications it will be connected to the Gigawatt 55 amp charger.

The steel parrot jaw clamp teeth will be lead coated just like the DLO 4AWG cables. And 12 AWG shunt wires within the jaws. Also to be multi coated with Bed Liner inside and out.

Aluminum conductor cannot be heat treated to eliminate brittleness. Aluminum's fatal flaw. Bend fine strand copper bundle back and forth until your finger's ache. Bend aluminum back and forth a few dozen times unil it fatigues and breaks. Vibration will also embrittle aluminum.


lightly used wire need not be concerned. Wire used for commercial jumping needs to be concerned, especially if coiled.

High voltage power transmission cable is aluminum. BUT It has rope stranded STEEL CABLE as a core.

Building any electrical assembly to tough grade specs is time consuming and a labor of love. Building to endure decades is an art form. This is Mexico. A place where garbage aluminum cables cost fifty dollars not $25 like in the states. I would be pleased if my cables last until the turn of 2100. My COVID delayed super charger for use in Alaska, has 2 chargers inside. The main charger is a 170 amp unit, the secondary is a 36 amp Megawatt for use with a tiny generator. It uses, owner supplied 2 AWG arctic grade charge lead cables. High speed blowers (brushless, German double ball bearing) can carry away an enormous amount of heat. This multi-charger project is missing mil-spec switches. Except for the 12 AWG SOOW power cable and battery leads color-coded 100% silicone wire is used throughout.

Gdetrailer
Explorer III
Explorer III
K Charles wrote:
ADT7976 is 4 gauge 500 amp


Most "jumper cables" you find at Walmart and most other retailers are 6 ga or even 8 ga.

I HAVE burned up 6 ga jumpers on a cold winters day.

Even worse yet, most premade jumper cables now days are cheating, using Copper COATED ALUMINUM (CCA)wire, manufacturers SHOULD label it as CCA but often they do not mention that it is CCA. Manufacturers electrically (electroplate) a very thin layer of copper over top of the aluminum wire and you simply left with a much lower capacity Aluminum wire with a fancy copper coat. The copper coating is to little to make any resistance or capacity difference over plain aluminum, it is solely there to stop the aluminum from corroding into a worthless high resistance white powder.

That makes that 4 ga copper coated ALUMINUM wire more equivalent to 6 ga all copper wire as far as Ampacity goes.

Good example is this one..

HERE

The price for the above is $20 for 20 ft ga jumper cables (40 ft of wire when adding pos and negative).. Box and description does not mention CCA but it is in expensive compared to all Copper wire for 4ft in that ga.

One reviewer in the link above measured the resistance of the jumper in the above link..

This is what they found..

"I am pleased with the 20-foot 4 Gauge jumper cable set made in China by EPAUTO. The cable is copper coated aluminum, known as โ€œCCA.โ€ It took microscopic examination to see the aluminum core in the fine wires forming the cable. I measured the resistance using an Agilent 34401A 6.5 digit bench multimeter in 4-wire resistance mode to be about 0.4 ohm per 1000 feet which is appropriate for #4 copper coated aluminum. This is equivalent to #6 copper. I was hoping this cable was 100% copper, but it was not advertised as such. "

4 ga copper wire can run $2 per ft easily, 40ft would be $80 not including the 4 clamps..

Yeah, I am aware of the "skin effect", please do not go there for DC. Skin effect only comes into play with AC (Alternating Current) and at HIGH FREQUENCIES (think RADIO TRANSMITTER FREQUENCIES).

OP is simply USING something (the wire) he already has laying around instead of buying a new cheaply made and less superior jumper cable.

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
DON'T ALLOW THE 2ND VEHICLE TO CRANK WHEN YOUR ENGINE IS RUNNING

RUSSIAN ROULETTE FOR ELECTRONICS

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
12 feet 24 feet total

frankwp
Explorer
Explorer
Just thinking, #4 is not very heavy for a jumper cable unless they are short. How long are you making them?
2010 Cruiser CF30QB
2003 GM 2500HD, crew cab, SB, 8.1, Allison

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
I decided on parrot jaw solid copper clamps. The manufacturer put a 900-amp rating on them which in fact is useless. The 4-gauge cable will be soldered directly through a clip and an 8-gauge shunt wire will be used.

After assembly, I will apply multiple coats of Rust-o-leum to the clamp. Inside and out. Thick bed liner, hopefully getting 5 mil thickness. The grips will be pushed on.

The jaw grip teeth will have been coated with 100% lead, so no acid deterioration hopefully for many years.

Unless they are lost or stolen these cables will be jump-starting, long after I am feeding a tree. ๐Ÿ™‚


Thanks for your help everyone. Yes, I did research every single suggestion in this thread. BTW the clips cost $17.95 each. 100% copper except the spring

Spridle
Explorer
Explorer
This is what i used.
Goodall Clamps

However I used the 1/0 size

theoldwizard1
Explorer
Explorer
The best you can buy ! Mueller BU-102B NOT CHEAP !

Ivylog
Explorer III
Explorer III
Split the cable/wires into two leads of 4โ€ each and fasten to each side of the clamp...soldier if possibly.
This post is my opinion (free advice). It is not intended to influence anyone's judgment nor do I advocate anyone do what I propose.
Sold 04 Dynasty to our son after 14 great years.
Upgraded with a 08 HR Navigator 45โ€™...

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
Being in Mexico, jumper cables are assembled Chinese copper plated toy steel clamps and 8 gauge copper-plated aluminum super thick vinyl insulation. There is an ad on Amazon for a seventy+ dollar PAIR (I need four) of Associated clamps that look good. $150.00 for four clamps seemed sorta pricey.

DLO insulation itself is great but specs call for it to be thick. Which shrugs off cuts, and nicks. And makes it a lot heavier. This is going to be a gift for a beefy 38-year-old mechanic and his tow truck. Connections will be mechanically crimped. Then the entire wire tip and the serrated copper pad are going to be dipped into molten lead. This stops battery acid corrosion and salt air corrosion forever. After that, the cable and the coated tip is slid up the handle under the wire spring and screwed into place. I have the 316 stainless 10/28 screws.

Like the Borg and the Gigawatt when I build something it is likely to endure many decades of commercial use and laugh it off.

But since 1980 many companies have gone under. If I wanted to buy "The Best" commercially made battery charger I would choose the Associated Twelve hundred dollar unit. But I build chargers that run circles around the Associated and will outlast them. But no 150 dollar clamps, please. ๐Ÿ˜„







being

pigman1
Explorer
Explorer
Not sure what you're asking. 4ga DLO cable is stranded so you can either hook it mechanically to jumper cable ends available at auto supply stores, solder it, or have someone swedge the wire to cable eye pieces and bolt these to the clamps. I can believe the insulation on this cable is stiff, but I just don't understand the question. Could you please elaborate?
Pigman & Piglady
2013 Tiffin Allegro Bus 43' QGP
2011 Chevy Silverado 1500
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K_Charles
Explorer
Explorer
ADT7976 is 4 gauge 500 amp