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Sixty five amps eh ?
I would use a ruddy great nut and bolt with a copper lug.
Can be removed in seconds, and will never let you down.
Bolted lugs have been around for a very long time and are used for aerospace applications.The nut and bolt sounds good and quick, i dont know why, but i always assume such connections are a little "hit and miss".....also, it would need to go to a wire which will need a crimp, and we all know how expensive crimp tools can be...also, the crimp and crimp tools are expensive for the heavy wire that we would need for the 65A.
the PC's usually deliver the big current to the same board as the module thats producing the 65A..so no need for board to board conenctors for it.
The screw really needs to be high tensile steel. A copper screw would just shear off before you could get enough clamping force. Cheap hardware store mild steel bolts are almost as bad.I like the "big copper screw" idea, but as you know, it will need a ring terminal and connection to a wire…which means buying a big expensive crimp tool, whereas we only need one test unit and this may not be worth it.
The screw really needs to be high tensile steel. A copper screw would just shear off before you could get enough clamping force. Cheap hardware store mild steel bolts are almost as bad.
The bolts and washers should be fine to reuse even if rusted, they will still clamp up tight, only deliberate abuse can really damage a good quality bolt.This is an excellent solution except that if you try to connect -disconnect more than 2-3 times, you will need to change everything (the hardware).
After a while, you will see that the copper lugs has developed a fine (but visible) rectifying oxide layer- unless the contact area is large and flat.
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