This assortment of 1mm male bullet connectors and single and double female sleeve connectors is indispensable for the British motorcycle and automobile enthusiast. The Lucas electrical system circuits were commonly joined by bullet connectors and sleeves, Lucas connectors, and spade terminals.
This kit is comprised of (20) 900269A brass 1mm bullet connectors, (10) of the 900288 single female sleeve connectors, and (5) 850641 double female sleeve connectors. The 1mm bullet connectors are ideal for crimping 18 gauge stranded wires, or for soldering 18 or 20 gauge wires.
The single female sleeve connectors allow two wires in the same circuit to be joined in a metal sleeve with a protective rubber cover. The double female sleeve connectors allow up to four wires to be joined together, especially useful for ground wires inside the motorcycle headlamp shell.
The bullet connector is either crimped or soldered to the wire, then pushed into one end of the sleeve connector. When properly fitted, a positive engagement will be felt with a light indexing click. We offer a helpful tool for correctly joining the male bullet connector with the female sleeve connector, sold under part number TBS-8008.
Please note: Due the nature of the product, we unfortunately do not accept returns on bearings, service tools or electrical components. Please be confident about your purchase before ordering. If you have questions, please contact us.
Anonymous (verified owner) –
I feel both bullets & snap connectors are very high quality. The bullets can be crimped or solder. Lucas crimper does very good job!
This size bullet (C314) takes original Triumph wire that has 14 strand conductor. Such as alternator or head lamp wires, etc.. Equivalent AWG between 16&18. It works well with both AWG 16&18 also.
Snap connectors are high quality. Hold bullets a little more snugly than originals. The metal is slightly thicker than originals which is better. The rubber fits snuggly & has held up well. Tip: Always inspect the snap connector metal for fracturing on disassembly. This is especially important on original connectors. The metal can split lengthways, leaving on the rubber to hold connector together. I’ve not seen the new ones split yet. The original ones tend to split with age.
Don