by Orlando St.R » Tue May 07, 2019 10:35 am
I bought a crimping tool and, for spade terminals, used 6.3mm brass spade terminals like these, covered with the insulation covers Glyn posted. They're not quite the same as the original Lucar ones, but near enough. They seem to work perfectly well.

- kojaycat_6.3mm_no_lock_brass_terminal_50_pack.jpg (64.73 KiB) Viewed 2005 times
The bullet terminals seem to give trouble more often, because the connectors seem to either become too loose or break internally. The new ones seem okay, but often benefit from tightening up with a pair of pliers before installing. I always solder the bullet terminals, as crimping seems less satisfactory than for spade terminals.

- bullet-connector-auto-electric-supplies.jpg (34.85 KiB) Viewed 2005 times
Whilst on the subject, a few years back I wondered why one headlamp wasn't working. I found the answer! Not everything lasts 50 years!

- five-way-bullet-connector.jpg (127.29 KiB) Viewed 2005 times
I bought a crimping tool and, for spade terminals, used 6.3mm brass spade terminals like these, covered with the insulation covers Glyn posted. They're not quite the same as the original Lucar ones, but near enough. They seem to work perfectly well.
[attachment=2]kojaycat_6.3mm_no_lock_brass_terminal_50_pack.jpg[/attachment]
The bullet terminals seem to give trouble more often, because the connectors seem to either become too loose or break internally. The new ones seem okay, but often benefit from tightening up with a pair of pliers before installing. I always solder the bullet terminals, as crimping seems less satisfactory than for spade terminals.
[attachment=1]bullet-connector-auto-electric-supplies.jpg[/attachment]
Whilst on the subject, a few years back I wondered why one headlamp wasn't working. I found the answer! Not everything lasts 50 years!
[attachment=0]five-way-bullet-connector.jpg[/attachment]