Battery Cable Upgrading?
Battery Cable Upgrading?
I want to install some new battery cables in my car as I seem to be upgrading a lot of stuff and my cables are looking kind of old so what the hell might as wll get some new ones. I'll probably be putting a gear reduction starter in also. Looking into this painless kit, its 1 guage, is that ok? Is 15 feet long enough? Thanks.http://www.summitracing.com/parts/PRF-40100/?rtype=10
- seabeelt
- Patron 2019
- Posts: 1614
- Joined: Tue Feb 19, 2008 4:22 pm
- Your car is a: Fiat Spider - 1971 BS1
- Location: Tiverton, RI
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
I'm guessing by the length that you do not have an early car with the battery in the front and that you are like most of us and have the battery in the trunk. Two things to consider: First to remove the old cable you will need to remove the back seat, possibly front seat, door sill, carpet and padding to be able to pull the wire holding tabs up to remove and reinstall the new cable, not to mention the firewall, rear trunk and passenger compartment wall gromments after you have disconnected the cable from the starter. ( the cable needs to be pulled out/installed from the trunk side as the openings for the wire are too small for the battery post clamp to pass through), Second unless the cable sheathing is cracked, broken or otherwise deterioated along the majority of its routing or at the terminal ends, it might be a whole lot easier to just replace the terminal ends if they are corroded beyond serviceable life. Your choice of course as we each have our own preferences about condition and asthetics, but just a thought or two
Michael and Deborah Williamson
1971 Spider -Tropie’ - w screaming IDFs
1971 Spider - Vesper -scrapped
1979 Spider - Seraphina - our son's car now sold
1972 Spider - Tortellini- our son's current
1971 Spider -Tropie’ - w screaming IDFs
1971 Spider - Vesper -scrapped
1979 Spider - Seraphina - our son's car now sold
1972 Spider - Tortellini- our son's current
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
Yup battery in the trunk. I'm a pro with taking the back seat out, did it plenty of times. I installed my own upholstery kit and carpet, so I know the way the wiring is routed. It shouldn't be too hard just time consuming. I'm actually looking forward to it.seabeelt wrote:I'm guessing by the length that you do not have an early car with the battery in the front and that you are like most of us and have the battery in the trunk. Two things to consider: First to remove the old cable you will need to remove the back seat, possibly front seat, door sill, carpet and padding to be able to pull the wire holding tabs up to remove and reinstall the new cable, not to mention the firewall, rear trunk and passenger compartment wall gromments after you have disconnected the cable from the starter. ( the cable needs to be pulled out/installed from the trunk side as the openings for the wire are too small for the battery post clamp to pass through), Second unless the cable sheathing is cracked, broken or otherwise deterioated along the majority of its routing or at the terminal ends, it might be a whole lot easier to just replace the terminal ends if they are corroded beyond serviceable life. Your choice of course as we each have our own preferences about condition and asthetics, but just a thought or two
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
Any other thoughts on the wire gauge size? Is 1 gauge wire safe to use? And will 15 feet be enough for the positive wire to reach the engine bay from the trunk?
-
- Patron 2024
- Posts: 3015
- Joined: Fri Jan 27, 2006 11:45 pm
- Your car is a: 1981 Spider 2000
- Location: Wallingford,CT
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
I measured a spare battery cable I have and its approx 13 feet so yes 15 feet will reach. I Electrical diagram book for 81 Soider has a chart that shows metric wire size 32 to be AWG 2. Also it shows the battery cable to be metric size 35 so I would guess that is bigger and the next bigger wire from 2 would be AWG 1.
I agree with previous post changing the entire cable is a lot of work and money for what is gained. One thing not mentioned is that inside the sleeve with the battery cable is a #8 brown wire that is all part of the + battery cable clamp. So there are actually 2 wires running in the sleeve. How do you intend to put terninals on your new wire???? What do you intend to do with the #8 brown wire in the sleeve with the battery cable??
Fiat used a good quality wire in these cars. The terminals on the ends particularly the battery terminal could have been aboused and need to be replaced. Some parts suppliers will crimp on new ends at a reasonable rate. Or they will splice in a new section of cable wil a molded battery terminal end. Either way they can keep a good electrical connection for both wires. I would not use terninals that are held on to the wire by tightening small bolts to compress the wire.
I agree with previous post changing the entire cable is a lot of work and money for what is gained. One thing not mentioned is that inside the sleeve with the battery cable is a #8 brown wire that is all part of the + battery cable clamp. So there are actually 2 wires running in the sleeve. How do you intend to put terninals on your new wire???? What do you intend to do with the #8 brown wire in the sleeve with the battery cable??
Fiat used a good quality wire in these cars. The terminals on the ends particularly the battery terminal could have been aboused and need to be replaced. Some parts suppliers will crimp on new ends at a reasonable rate. Or they will splice in a new section of cable wil a molded battery terminal end. Either way they can keep a good electrical connection for both wires. I would not use terninals that are held on to the wire by tightening small bolts to compress the wire.
-
- Patron 2020
- Posts: 3466
- Joined: Sun Nov 25, 2007 6:00 pm
- Your car is a: 1973 Spider [sold]
- Location: Baltimore, MD
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
I agree, that's probably what he has on there now; I used an anvil-type crimping tool on both ends of my new battery cable. Place the stripped cable into the terminal ferrule, place the ferrule under the spike, and whack it with a hand sledge. The tool is about twenty bucks online. The handled tools for this size wire are hundreds of dollars. You could always "install" the wire, mark where the terminals need to be (including orientation - big wire doesn't twist easily) remove the cable, then take the cable and connectors to a car stereo installer and have him crimp them. In this scenario, you must fish the cable from rear to front, as the battery terminal won't fit thru the vehicle grommets. The lug may not, either - check before crimping.spider2081 wrote: I would not use terminals that are held on to the wire by tightening small bolts to compress the wire.
I had good luck with components from EV Source in UT. Their 1AWG wire was as supple as rope of the same diameter. Good quality connectors, heat shrink tubing, etc. Those EV guys deal with thousands of amps, so their components must be up to snuff.
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
Well I bit the bullet and ordered the painless cable kit last night as I took a tape measure and figured that 15 ft would be plenty of wire.
I'll probably pick up one of those anvil type battery terminal crimpers mentioned above, saw them on Amazon.
I think just the FI cars had the extra brown wire. I did add a 10 gauge wire parellel with the battery + wire when i did the brown wire surgery.I agree with previous post changing the entire cable is a lot of work and money for what is gained. One thing not mentioned is that inside the sleeve with the battery cable is a #8 brown wire that is all part of the + battery cable clamp. So there are actually 2 wires running in the sleeve. How do you intend to put terninals on your new wire???? What do you intend to do with the #8 brown wire in the sleeve with the battery cable??
I'll probably pick up one of those anvil type battery terminal crimpers mentioned above, saw them on Amazon.
-
- Patron 2024
- Posts: 3015
- Joined: Fri Jan 27, 2006 11:45 pm
- Your car is a: 1981 Spider 2000
- Location: Wallingford,CT
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
Sorry I didn't read your post very carefully. Never went to the link to see the cable has the battery connection on it already.
And didn't notice you have a 1979 car.
And didn't notice you have a 1979 car.
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
I plan to replace the positive and negative cables next week. I took another look at the old cable and some of the insulation looks a little abraded. The only issue I have is that I need a battery cable lug crimper. Those anvil type ones don't seem to do 1 gauge cables and those big crimper wrenches are pretty expensive. I'm gonna see if I can rent one maybe. Any ideas? Thanks.
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
Well I just bit the bullet and just ordered this 12 ton crimper with 10 dies. Hopefully I'll have some more projects/project cars in my life to use it on to justify the price. This isn't the 8 ton one which harbor freight sells that has the mislabled small dies. I could always share it with my fellow Fiat members if they needed to borrow it.
- wachuko
- Posts: 1175
- Joined: Thu Feb 04, 2010 10:56 pm
- Your car is a: 1981 Fiat 2000 Spider
- Location: Orlando, FL USA
- Contact:
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
That is one cool tool! Not something used often but who cares!! LOL... like tools!!
Fiat88 wrote:Well I just bit the bullet and just ordered this 12 ton crimper with 10 dies. Hopefully I'll have some more projects/project cars in my life to use it on to justify the price. This isn't the 8 ton one which harbor freight sells that has the mislabled small dies. I could always share it with my fellow Fiat members if they needed to borrow it.
Drive Safe!
Wachuko
1981 Fiat Spider Progress thread
1967 912 Progress Thread
1981 911 SC Coupe RS Transformation
1983 911 SC Coupe RSR Transformation
1991 964 C4 Cabriolet Progress Thread
2012 BMW X5 xDrive35d
2015 FIAT Abarth
Wachuko
1981 Fiat Spider Progress thread
1967 912 Progress Thread
1981 911 SC Coupe RS Transformation
1983 911 SC Coupe RSR Transformation
1991 964 C4 Cabriolet Progress Thread
2012 BMW X5 xDrive35d
2015 FIAT Abarth
-
- Patron 2022
- Posts: 1807
- Joined: Thu Jan 17, 2008 9:31 pm
- Your car is a: 1982 Spider hers 1972 Spider his
- Location: Hydesville, CA (NorCal)
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
The new cable looks much better than those junk universal clamps luckly, I can use the crimper at work to make mine.
Trey
1982 SPIDER 2000, 1964 CHEVYII, 1969 Chevy Nova, 2005 DODGE RAM, 1988 Jeep Comanche
1972 Spider, 78 Spider rat racer 57 f-100,
1982 SPIDER 2000, 1964 CHEVYII, 1969 Chevy Nova, 2005 DODGE RAM, 1988 Jeep Comanche
1972 Spider, 78 Spider rat racer 57 f-100,
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
I totally agree! When I inspected the strands going to the lug which mounts to the chasis, 3-4 strands were severed. That's pretty good you have access to a crimper.htchevyii wrote:The new cable looks much better than those junk universal clamps luckly, I can use the crimper at work to make mine.
Re: Battery Cable Upgrading?
Almost done routing the cable, had to modify the plastic grommets a little as the cable is slightly bigger then the oem cable suprisingly. One question though does the battery cable route through that oval hole in that crossbrace just behind the drivers side backseat. The oem cable was just laying over the crossbrace but didn't look right?