Did that dude really attach a copper connector to an aluminum wire?Show this to your dealer, they may not want to do it but its worth a shot
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Did that dude really attach a copper connector to an aluminum wire?Show this to your dealer, they may not want to do it but its worth a shot
I don't know if the factory wire is Al, but assuming it is.Did that dude really attach a copper connector to an aluminum wire?
Umm......ok. So lets use your house wiring example. While my house does not have any AL wiring if it did and I needed to connect AL to CU I would use connectors that are NEC approved.I don't know if the factory wire is Al, but assuming it is.
If you look at the bus bar with with fuses, it is coated copper. You can see when he grinds off the coating for soldering. all the bus bars and posts are copper.
Its irrelevant though, as all those parts will be replaced when the new wire harness arrives. I think its a good repair given the situation. It is safe and will almost certainly last until the factory parts are available.
Go look in your breaker box in your house, you will likely find several AL-CU joints. Not ideal but also not a death sentence
What symptoms prompted your dealer visit one week before being towed? Did you have an event similar to mine or something else?Possibly, my battery was fully charged when towed.
I went to the dealer one week prior to my truck having to be towed. I was trying to avoid the long wait that others mentioned.
On a positive note, the longer the truck sits at the dealer, the closer I get to utilizing the lemon law.
Truck was dead, I'd wiggle the fuse box cable and regained power. Service advisor said it was okay to drive, bad adviceWhat symptoms prompted your dealer visit one week before being towed? Did you have an event similar to mine or something else?
Service entrance and sub panel wiring is usually Al. NEC approved. Usually coated with NO-AL-OX or similar when being joined to copper.Umm......ok. So lets use your house wiring example. While my house does not have any AL wiring if it did and I needed to connect AL to CU I would use connectors that are NEC approved.
In the vid you linked was the connector and repair approved by Ford? If not who would be liable if any damage happed to the vehicle or its operator because of this repair?
IDK man looks like a shade tree mechanic repair to me and if it was my vehicle I would not want the repair to be done in this manner. I would wait until an approved Ford repair was issues or wait until a new harness was shipped.
The wire coming from the meter into my sub panel is also copper. What type of wire Ameren uses before the meter is not my concern.
Besides the unapproved copper connector repair this guy did he also hacked together an off the shelf inline fuse to use in the customers vehicle. A vehicle that is presumably still under warranty. Sorry bro but this is the very definition of a shade tree mechanic repair.
I would be appalled if my dealer did this without my knowledge or consent. Remember just because you can doesn't mean you should.
Dig into this forum and look for the video where the Owner took it to a mechanic and they compressed a new eyelet on the end of the cable where it separated,It should only take a day to have them fix it. And if they won't get done find a Certified auto electrician to do it for you and get back on the roadAm I the only chump waiting for a replacement battery cable? I'm on week three, dealership says they're waiting for Ford to ship parts. No loaner and payments continue.
Um........becasue I watched the video and nowhere did he say that his repair was approved by his service manager, Ford, or the customer.How did you get to "without knowledge or consent"?
The guy is a Ford master tech at a dealership. The repair was done with consent, and posted on youtube for the world to see. Not trying to hide a shady hack job.
The OEM uses copper buss bars connecting to the AL wire, but this guy cant? Should he have tinned it, yes for ultimate longevity....but again THE PARTS ARE ON BACKORDER, and will be replaced with OEM parts if the customer wants when they are available.
He used a fuse of the same rating, and soldered it to the copper buss bar, just like the OEM did.
So now all Eaton/Bussman fuses are also suspect and inferior quality just because they aren't FORD? You know ford doesn't make the OEM fuses or the harness right?
This will not void his warranty as the repair was done at a dealership with video evidence.
If you want to be without your brand new vehicle for an indefinite amount of time, by all means. The guy did his customer right to keep him on the road until the parts arrive.
Mine took just over three weeks to arrive… hopefully yours will arrive soon. I haven’t had any problems or FordPass notifications since the new harness was installed.Am I the only chump waiting for a replacement battery cable? I'm on week three, dealership says they're waiting for Ford to ship parts. No loaner and payments continue.
The wire coming from the meter into my sub panel is also copper. What type of wire Ameren uses before the meter is not my concern.
Besides the unapproved copper connector repair this guy did he also hacked HawaiiThe wire is not aluminum it's the sodder left on the end of the cable he's putting copper to copperDid that dude really attach a copper connector to an aluminum wire?
Wut? I didn't say any one hacked Hawaii. OMG....I'm out on this one. You guys can believe whatever you want but I'm out.bbhaag said:
The wire coming from the meter into my sub panel is also copper. What type of wire Ameren uses before the meter is not my concern.
Besides the unapproved copper connector repair this guy did he also hacked Hawaii
The wire is not aluminum it's the sodder left on the end of the cable he's putting copper to copperbbhaag said:
Did that dude really attach a copper connector to an aluminum wire?