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Old 11-20-2017, 04:41 PM   #1
'70_402
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Heavy gauge battery cables.

Has anyone ever made their own cables from 1/0 or some heavier than factory cable?? My truck didn't come with any cables and i didn't know if any vendors made a non-factory top post style cable set? I'm going with an LS swap and i want to make sure i have a good supply of juice for all the goodies i'll be running.
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Old 11-20-2017, 04:46 PM   #2
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Re: Heavy gauge battery cables.

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Originally Posted by '70_402 View Post
Has anyone ever made their own cables from 1/0 or some heavier than factory cable?? My truck didn't come with any cables and i didn't know if any vendors made a non-factory top post style cable set? I'm going with an LS swap and i want to make sure i have a good supply of juice for all the goodies i'll be running.
Yes. I always make my own. I go to the welding supply company and buy wire and put the ends on. Most of them have a machine that crimps the end on. I usually crimp one end on when I buy it, take it home and route it where it will live, then mark the exact length, take it back and crimp the second end.
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Old 11-20-2017, 05:33 PM   #3
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Re: Heavy gauge battery cables.

Might also try a place that sells HD truck parts. Most of your 18 wheelers use 00 cable. Some can build to length as well.
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Old 11-20-2017, 10:24 PM   #4
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Re: Heavy gauge battery cables.

Yes! It is a great idea. Here is a link with some info on the subject. There's lots of others on sizing and routing. Just do some searches.

http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=747881
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Old 11-21-2017, 05:41 AM   #5
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Re: Heavy gauge battery cables.

After some resistance, I made my own battery cables. It was very easy.

I bought #2 gauge cable (red and black in color) from a NAPA store, using the old pieces as a length guide. Mine turned out overly long, I'll trim those back and recrimp.

I bought the end pieces at NAPA also. My father has a crimper, the thing is huge, lots of leverage, that he bought back in the 1960's when he was an electrician in a coal mine. Personally, I would use something like that if I were you, but the impact crimpers are much cheaper (the tool dad has would cost several hundred dollars today).

I found red and black heat shrink, glue lined, on ebay.com. That stuff is the bomb! The glue lining melts around the cable as it shrinks and conforms.....it permanently seals moisture out.

I used a carpenter's knife to trim back the insulation.

NAPA and I estimated what gauge to use based on how thick the wire cable looked on the old ones. #2 is much thicker than recommended, which should allow even more electrons to flow.

I went with new battery terminals, let me find what I went with. I like the terminals and the process so much, I want to do it to my daily driver Honda next summer to make the yearly cleaning of cable ends and battery terminals much easier.

https://www.oreillyauto.com/detail/s.../08805/4742296

Just search youtube for crimping videos, here are two good ones but I didn't have any fraying issues.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DlqUFPGU6C4

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mBSnfHhi5xA

I used a heat gun to shrink down the heat shrink, I locked the newly crimped cable in a bench vise and then used a heat gun I bought to remove old vinyl floor tiles some years ago. It worked very, very well. No need to buy or use a torch of any kind. I did a practice run on some rebar my dad had laying around.

One thing I would do differently. Crimp on and seal one end, then mount that to your starter or engine ground (depending on which wire you are doing first). Then run that to your battery, allowing the cable to align itself how it wishes as it will twist to its most comfortable position. Then mark how the cable end will go. Then remove insulation, put on heat shrink, crimp end, and shrink heat shrink.

If you do not, the terminal end will likely be turned a way different than how it wants to lay and you'll have to fight that when you put the cable end onto the battery terminal. I'll be able to fix that when I trim my cables down. Somehow my new cables are about 6 inches longer than they need to be.

Be sure to clean your mounting points on starter and ground very well with a wire wheel (Dremel Tool) or brush and then use some dielectric grease to stave off corrosion.

A crimping tools I would have bought if I dad didn't have that big crimper.

https://www.amazon.com/PENSON-CAYQK0...+crimping+tool

https://www.summitracing.com/parts/l...SABEgK67fD_BwE
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Old 11-21-2017, 07:23 AM   #6
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Talking Re: Heavy gauge battery cables.

I haven't used them for my truck but I have used them for a few golf carts. I have a 6ft set going on the ramp truck for the winch if I ever get around to do it.
#2 AWG


3ft.

https://www.harborfreight.com/3-ft-i...awg-63748.html



6ft.

https://www.harborfreight.com/6-ft-i...awg-63747.html

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Old 11-21-2017, 10:45 AM   #7
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Re: Heavy gauge battery cables.

I make lots of custom battery cables at the real job. They are kind of pricey, but they are just what the customer wants/needs for their particular applications.
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Old 11-21-2017, 12:17 PM   #8
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Re: Heavy gauge battery cables.

If you are redoing them, always a good idea to add one extra heavy gauge between the motor and frame.
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Old 11-21-2017, 12:27 PM   #9
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Re: Heavy gauge battery cables.

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Originally Posted by demian5 View Post
If you are redoing them, always a good idea to add one extra heavy gauge between the motor and frame.
Good point, you can never have too much grounding! I learned that when I used to build Demo Derby cars, those flimsy braided ground wires would pull loose, and then your engine would barely run.

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Old 11-21-2017, 12:41 PM   #10
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Re: Heavy gauge battery cables.

Just remember that not all cable is created equal.

I got a killer deal on some heavy gauge wire. I ran into sporadic cranking issues. One day I was trying to figure out what the issue was and brushed against the wire and practically got burned by how hot it was.

I ended up going down to my local welding shop and bought some welding cable and lugs. After redoing the cables it fires like a champ every single time.
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