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Pull-Force Testing: Engineering the Lifeline of Wire-to-Connector Integrity | Leaka

Why is pull-force testing mandatory for connector wire fixing? Explore mechanical strength, contact resistance decay, and thermal runaway risks in EV and industrial sectors.
May 28th,2026 41 Views

In any high-reliability interconnect system, the wire-fixing structure (crimping, screw-locking, or potting) is the critical "bridge" between the cable and the contact. Data from industrial wire harness field studies indicates that 35% of all connector failures stem from wire fixation issues—80% of which occur because the structure cannot withstand real-world mechanical stress, leading to loose wires, intermittent signals, or complete disconnection.

At Leaka, we mitigate these risks through Agile Engineering, ensuring that our bespoke factory-direct cable harnesses and connectors  meet the most stringent mechanical standards before deployment.

1. Mechanical Risks Exposed by Pull-Force Testing

The reliability of a connection depends on the "mechanical bite" between the terminal and the conductor.

  • Crimp Pull-out Failure: For a standard 16AWG wire, the pull-out force should be 150N. However, a deviation in crimp depth of just 0.1mm can crash this value to 80N—merely 53% of the requirement. This invisible defect leads to instant failure when a cable is accidentally snagged during equipment maintenance.
  • Vibration-Induced Loosening: In high-vibration environments like industrial wind turbines or robotics, insufficient screw torque (3Nm instead of 5Nm) causes the fixation to degrade over time. This mechanical instability is a primary driver of vibration fatigue and fretting corrosion .

2. Electrical Degradation and Thermal Runaway

A loose wire fixation does more than just break a circuit; it alters the electrical characteristics of the interface.

  • Micro-displacement Wear: Even if the wire doesn't pull out, stress below the "critical threshold" causes micron-level shifts. This wears away the plating (Gold/Tin) and increases contact resistance from  to over 100mΩ, leading to signal loss.
  • Localized Overheating: In high-power systems (e.g., EV charging guns), a rise in resistance creates a thermal bomb. Based on Joule's Law (Q=I2Rt), a 100A current passing through a compromised 20mΩ joint generates 200Wh of heat, melting the insulation and triggering a fire. This is a common failure mode when voltage and current handling is not properly engineered .

3. Global Standards and Testing Benchmarks

Leaka’s engineering team adheres to international benchmarks to guarantee performance for our Precision M8 and M12 Connector Series :

Application Sector Wire Gauge (AWG) Standard Min. Pull-force (N)
Consumer Electronics 24-28 (Fine) IEC 61984 10 - 30N
Industrial Control 16-22 IEC 60947 50 - 120N
Automotive (EV) 4-12 (Heavy) SAE J2839 / GB/T 150 - 500N
Aerospace 16-20 MIL-STD-1344 120 - 300N

Note: Passing the test requires the wire conductor to snap before the terminal releases, ensuring the fixation is stronger than the wire itself.

4. Agile Optimization: From Manual to Servo-Controlled

To support market innovators with high-mix, low-volume (HMLV) needs, Leaka implements:

  1. Servo-Controlled Crimping: Positioning accuracy within ±0.01mm to eliminate manual "feel" errors.
  2. Coupled Stress Testing: We don't just test static pull; we perform "Thermal Cycle + Pull" tests (40C to +125C) to verify that materials don't creep or loosen under thermal stress.
  3. 100% In-Line Monitoring: Real-time force-displacement curves are recorded for every critical batch, ensuring full traceability and zero-defect delivery.

Technical Expertise & Industry Standards FAQ

Q: Does a higher pull-force always mean a better connection? A: Not necessarily. "Over-crimping" can exceed the material's elastic limit, weakening the wire strands and actually increasing resistance. The goal is to reach the "Golden Compression Ratio" (typically 15-20% area reduction).

Q: How does humidity impact pull-force over time? A: Moisture leads to electro-chemical corrosion at the crimp interface. In "Coupled Failure" scenarios, pull-force can drop by 40% in just 100 days if the seal is not airtight, a risk especially high in marine environments.

Q: Can I use pull-force testing for soldered connections? A: Yes. Soldered joints should also be tested to ensure the "heat-affected zone" of the wire hasn't become brittle, though the failure mode for solder is more often fatigue cracking rather than pure pull-out.

Q: What is "Creep Failure" in wire fixation? A: Under a sustained but lower-than-peak load, certain plastics or low-grade alloys can slowly deform (creep) over months, eventually leading to a loose connection even without a sudden impact.


Secure Your Mission-Critical Links with Leaka

Don't let a loose wire jeopardize your system's uptime. Partner with Leaka for Agile Engineering solutions that combine mechanical mastery with a Flexible Supply Chain built for extreme reliability.

[Consult Leaka’s Engineers for Pull-Force & Assembly Support]  [Request a Crimp Quality & Pull-Force Sample Report]

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