My house is absolutely not grounded well. I actually have another thread pursing this same general issue from the grounding side! Every outlet in my house reports "open ground" on a test tool. The outlets in this bedroom specifically don't even have a ground wire to the box. I ran a ground to a cold water line, which made the test meter happy, but didn't affect the problem. I rent, so installing proper grounding isn't an option. I could run a ground line outside to a stake, if that would actually work.
Those pins are very easy to remove......with the right extraction tool.
The tool inserts from the front and has a hollow sleeve to release the keepers and then an internal plunger to push the pin out.
Dave.
The tool inserts from the front and has a hollow sleeve to release the keepers and then an internal plunger to push the pin out.
Dave.
From this picture (SP10 power cable connector) Google directed me to AMP TE CONNECTIVITY 206044 1That looks pretty plausible. How’d you find it?
https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/te-connectivity-amp-connectors/206044-1/19361
Those look like 20awg pins. It's a very standard military style connector that's been used for many decades.
You can purchase an el-cheapo extractor for those from Digikey or similar.
Dave.
You can purchase an el-cheapo extractor for those from Digikey or similar.
Dave.
if your`re lucky a metal ballpoint pen like a parker brand filling has the same diameter. you slide that tube over the contact and that squeezes the wings on the contact together so you can pull them out on the wire side.
The extractor tools use very thin steel, I doubt you'd come across something the right size and thin enough by chance.
The extractors worked! Thank you everyone! I have successfully removed one pin as a proof of concept. I can now proceed with my repair.
There are pin extractor tools designed for that, otherwise it's impossible.
There are many kinds and sizes, but it has to be exactly the right size for the particular connector.
The mfr part number should be somewhere on the connector, possibly it's an Amphenol circular connector.
If you damage the pin, you will need a much more expensive mfr spec ratcheting crimp tool to install another pin.
An example, but this may not be the right one. You need the mfr connector part number to find the proper extractor.
https://www.amazon.com/JRready-Extractor-Removal-Connectors-Connector/dp/B0B6FMZMH4/ref=sr_1_5
True. When you order the connectors the come with the pin pulling tool. When I was in the hardware side of the house, we'd order thousands of the connectors... the configurations were different but the pins proper only came in a few "gauges". So, we had tons of those pin puller tools in our tool boxes.
You will need to figure out the part number on the plug assembly.
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