D connectors have been in use in military aircraft for a long time and the 
black boxes are swapped in and out like clockwork...In my experience D's very 
reliable...They came in 9, 15, 25, 37, and 50 pin configurations as I remember, 
and I seem to recall a 44 pin one, too...They were made by several 
manufacturers both in crimp and solder types...

I think some folks don't like them because they are intimidated when it comes 
to soldering them...Cheap consumer versions have plastic insulators that soften 
when the pins are heated and allow the pins to move or even fall out...I keep a 
matching set of high quality industrial D's for use as holders when I am 
soldering these connectors...The high quality connector is held in a small vise 
and the cheap mating connector is mated to it for soldering...This keeps the 
pins from moving around when heated...

Soldering them is really very easy...Dip the untinned, stripped end of the wire 
in liquid rosin flux, insert it into the pin socket and hold it there with your 
fingers...Holding the iron in the other hand, pick up a small amount of solder 
on the hot tip and touch it to the wire and pin at the joint...The solder will 
flow off the tip and into the joint with minimal heating and you are 
done...BTW, I always use spaghetti sleeves on them, especially if there is a 
bare shield wire in the mix...

Jerry wa2dkg
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