Regarding the video I referenced showing poor tradecraft in making power crimp terminations.... credit to the video blogger, in response to my comments and direction to NASA guidance on the topic, he has pulled the video.
Dangar Marine is normally a fun channel to watch and he is a responsible chap. He replied in a positive manner to my comments on the video. I wish more video bloggers did the same when they were obviously showing poor tradecraft. In this case the video was based on poor advice he had been given by his audience concerning a previous video on making battery leads.
It just shows how misinformation can spread. Just because it's on the internet or someone tells you something, does not make it true. Research, research, research

At least this particular misleading video has now been taken down.
For those who did not see it, the presenter showed how to terminate high current battery cables for use in maritime vessels. On advice from his viewing community he applied copious amounts of solder to the copper cable using a blow torch, apparently to prevent corrosion. The copper conductors spread as the heat burned the insulation and solder filled the gaps between them. He then tried the same task using a 50W Weller type electronics soldering iron with a fine electronics tip fitted. Not surprisingly it created a useless blobby mess on the cable conductors. He was trying to show how hard it is to tin such large cables using a 'normal' soldering iron.
We were then treated to a lesson in how to make your own crimp lugs using lengths of copper tube that had been partially flattened in a vice and drilled to form a lug. The hollow oversize end was then slipped over the solder tinned cable ends and a hydraulic crimping tool used to compress the tube. The result was a DIY crimp that had wings on each side as the crimp die was too small for the tube diameter !
I commented that such a termination may be fine as an emergency bush engineering solution but it had no place on a marine vessel as its failure could strand the vessel. The idea of using a plain unplated copper DIY lug termination on a heavily solder plated multi core cable was abhorrent to me and a disaster waiting to happen. There was so much solder on the cable that The crimp would be compressing down onto a combination of copper and soft electronics solder. The solder would flow over time due to the pressure on it and the termination would fail. The cable was to be used in a 'tinny' Aluminium hulled boat. You can imagine what a 'live' high current sourcing 12V cable could do if it broke loose and started shorting to the Aluminium hull

Even if not so serious, just the heating of a poor termination and its resultant poor conduction under load could disable a vessel.
The author of the video obviously did his reaseach (a bit late) and realised he had been given poor advice.
Fraser