We have built DLO battery cables assemblies and have had a couple installations 
flagged by inspectors due to not having UL requirements (83 and 1581 if I 
remember correctly).
We mostly build battery assemblies with the two class K options - All-Flex or 
X-Flex

Here are a list of the UL certifications between the two:

DLO cable
(24AWG ASTM Class)
EPDM/CPE Insulation
-40°C - +90°C

    UL
44
1650
2556
2806


Cobra X-Flex and Direct Wire All-Flex
(30AWG ASTM -Class-K)
PVC insulation
-50°C – 75°C (Wet) / 105°C (Dry)

    UL
83
758
1063
1232
1283
1284
1337
1338
1339
1426
1581
1581
2556
2556
10070
10269





Bryan Norkunas

PV-Cables Inc.

989 Milton Ave Ste 1D

Ferndale CA 95536

(707) 923-3000 office

www.pv-cables.com<http://www.pv-cables.com/>

________________________________
From: RE-wrenches <[email protected]> on behalf of Tom 
McCalmont via RE-wrenches <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, September 3, 2025 5:02 PM
To: RE-wrenches <[email protected]>
Cc: Tom McCalmont <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Ferrules for large fine-stranded wire.

I’ve been monitoring this thread with interest and wanted to add some 
perspective since we have experience with this.

Listed lugs in combination with DLO cable are a good solution for connecting 
batteries to inverters.  The DLO cables are much more flexible at large wire 
sizes typical of battery cables, and listed lugs provide a safe method to 
connect the cables to the inverter that assures you will not lose strands in 
the connection.  Because DLO cable contains many strands and there is some 
amount of open space between those strands, the overall diameter of the DLO for 
a given gauge is higher than it will be for equivalent sized stranded THWN.  
Therefore, you need to locate lugs that are appropriately sized specifically 
for DLO cable.

In addition, many of the crimping devices that I’ve seen pass through the group 
for attaching the lugs will not result in a listed connection, and they could 
create fire risk.  Screw lugs may not tighten appropriately on the fine strands 
of DLO as one commenter mentioned.  Hammer-type crimping tools may work to 
result in what feels like a firm connection, but there is no way to judge that 
you have hammered with the exact appropriate force to result in a listed 
connection.  The only sure-fire way to do so is with an over-center crimping 
tool that is listed for the purpose of attaching the specific lug you have 
selected to the cable type of a matching size.

These tools are very expensive, and I understand the pain of having to purchase 
the correct one.  We are all tempted by cheaper options.  But the pain of that 
one-time expense is likely to be much less than the pain of compensating a very 
unhappy customer following a fire started by a substandard connection.

As we all know, battery cables carry a lot of current, and substandard 
connections are much more likely to create fire risk than would be the case for 
high voltage, low current connections.  I hope this voice of experience is 
helpful!

Tom McCalmont, P.E.
CEO, Paired Power
pairedpower.com<http://pairedpower.com> | 
LinkedIn<https://www.linkedin.com/company/paired-power/>
Direct: (669) 877-2931

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On Sep 3, 2025, at 4:33 PM, James Jarvis via RE-wrenches 
<[email protected]> wrote:

William,

None of the crimpers you sent photos of are for ferrules. Those are all lug 
crimpers. Some are barely that. Nobody should be seriously considering anything 
you hit with a hammer to be a proper tool for installing any type of connector.

Ferrule crimpers produce a square crimp and do what they are supposed to.

Last Wednesday I sent you a note with this link:
https://www.ferrulesdirect.com/collections/hand-crimping-tools/products/vag240

It makes a square shape and won't have weird edges and the artifacts you 
mention you get when you smoosh a ferrule with a non-ferrule crimper.

Ferrules are highly useful and reliable when installed correctly. You just need 
the right tool.

The other thing I mentioned last week were pin adapters. They are crimp on 
fittings that are rated for fine stranded wire and they convert it to course 
stranded or solid shape. Here was the example I sent:
https://www.ilsco.com/Ilsco/ccrz__ProductDetails?sku=F2C-1%2F0-1%2F0-ILSM-ILS&cclcl=en_US




Best regards,



-James Jefferson Jarvis
APRS World, LLC
+1-507-454-2727
http://www.aprsworld.com/


On Wed, Sep 3, 2025 at 6:10 PM William Miller via RE-wrenches 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:

Friends:



My understanding is if the lug has a set-screw that contacts the strands, fine 
strands can wind around the set screw, get into the threads and not tighten 
adequately.  If you are crimping fine strands inside of some type of barrel 
your connection should be OK.



I had been using Outback until they imploded and all of the battery connections 
were via studs or bolts that required crimped-on rings.  Now I am back to set 
screw lugs and fine stranding became an issue again.



I did try another experiment: I took a 4/0 ferrule that would not fit into the 
Envy lugs and snipped a section out of it.  I curled it into a slightly smaller 
diameter and it fit into the lug.  I suppose one could cut the ferrule in half 
longitudinally and insert a portion of the ferrule between the set screw and 
the strands.



I am pleased with the copper sheeting wrapped around the fine strands.  That 
will be my SOP.



William



Miller Solar

17395 Oak Road, Atascadero, CA 93422

805-438-5600

www.millersolar.com<http://www.millersolar.com/>

CA Lic. 773985




From: RE-wrenches 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
 On Behalf Of Ray Walters via RE-wrenches
Sent: Wednesday, September 3, 2025 1:40 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: Ray Walters
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Ferrules for large fine-stranded wire.



I've got to ask: Are none of the lugs on these Chinese inverters approved for 
fine strand cable?  I just have not had a problem with that, but I've mostly 
used Magnum, Midnite, and Outback equipment over the years.   What were the 
lugs on the old Trace DC 250 boxes?  Were they fine strand rated?  They sure 
were tough to get 4/0 into, as William mentioned.

Ray
Remote Solar

On 9/3/2025 12:57 PM, Kent via RE-wrenches wrote:

William,

If the only reason the ferrule wouldn't fit after using the hex crimper was the 
ridge left where the dies meet, you could rotate the cable 120 degrees and 
crimp the ferrule again.

I doubt that the indenter crimper will do a decent job with large ferrules.

I do like your thin piece of copper solution. Not UL approved but I dare say 
wrench approved.

Kent Osterberg
Blue Mountain Solar



On 9/2/2025 8:55 PM, William Miller via RE-wrenches wrote:

Friends:



Thank you for all of your input on this question.  I feel it only right I 
report back how this turned out



I tried a crimper like this:





It left a jagged ridge on both sides of the ferrule where the dies met.



The crimper below was suggested but I have not tried it:



This was suggested but I have not tried it either:



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