Replacing the last power supply cap

Very funny, Mr. Joppa.  ;)

But is that any better than just stripping 2-3 inches of insulation off the end of the lead, wrapping it around the terminal a couple times, and then cinching down the nut to hold everything in place?
 
There are many ways to skin a cat.. In the end, you have to feel good about it! If I dont feel good about something, its only a matter of time before I tear it apart for no real good reason!
 
adamct said:
But is that any better than just stripping 2-3 inches of insulation off the end of the lead, wrapping it around the terminal a couple times, and then cinching down the nut to hold everything in place?

Technically, no.  But if I want to disconnect the wire I don't have to loosen the nut and unwrap it.
 
Go to your hardware store.  Buy some ring terminals that will fit onto the studs.  Crimp the wires onto them, solder over if you are as compulsive as I am.  Then you have what you need.
 
I think I'm going to try and mount the oilers upside down on the top of the chassis using brackets, and then attach the big blue caps at the back. The brackets I have are just slightly too big for the metal can oilers, so I need something to fill the gap that is preferably slightly "tacky" to avoid having the caps slide around. Something like a piece of bicycle inner tube would probably be ideal, but I happen to have a piece of styrofoam-like material that is the perfect thickness, density and degree of tackiness. It has a fairly small, regular and tight cell structure (it is a sheet of foam material that the oilers were wrapped in when they were shipped). Does anyone know whether this stuff is likely to degrade over time? I'm thinking about shrinkage, compression, brittleness, flaking, turning into goop, etc. I realize this is a wild shot in the dark, so I'm not really expecting anyone to know the answer to this.

Best regards,
Adam
 
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