Yeah that is a little annoying. I didnt realize the Andersons didnt require soldering. How does it get a good connection then?
A (properly) crimped connection has compressed the strands together so hard that they have effectively "fused" into a single, solid bundle. As such the connection is "optimal", electrically and mechanically. It is often believed that "solder is the best conductor". In reality, solder is a worse conductor than either copper or pure silver (the coating on an Powerpole crimp connector). Hence a properly executed crimp has a lower resistance than a soldered connection.
You can tin the wire tips and cut back to where there isnt so much solder as well, which works fine. But I know what you're talking about.
This is a very good idea and what one should do every time. "Best practice" for soldered joints (in military and aerospace applications) calls for the solder to reach no further than "one conductor/strand width of the insulation", i.e. it should not touch the insulation at all. (Note that "one conductor width" of a multistrand wire would be impossible to judge, confirming that multistrand would not normally be soldered - it is so prone to solder wicking that such a standard would be impossible to meet.) So, as you say, the "next best thing" would be to tin the end then strip the insulation back to where bare copper
just shows, then trim the tinned part to the required length. There's an obvious difficulty with this method in obtaining a specific wire length when tinning both ends.
It's worth noting that best way to tin the end of a bulky multistrand wire is with a solder pot (which itself requires some practice!). It's highly likely that a factory (making ESCs, for example) would use this method.
the stiffness is the wire infiltrated with solder and it prevents breaking wires like crimping does, loose frays are non existent, etc.... I'm on PRC6 and love em
That "stiffness", far from being beneficial, is a specific weakness. The point at which the solder stops (the "interface") is susceptible to breakage of the strands (which, by definition, will be undetectable) through mechanical handling/deflection and (particularly) vibration. In military/aerospace applications any soldered wire joint (both wire-to-wire and wire-to-device) must be "supported" so that the copper/solder interface point is prevented from moving and protected from vibration. For very small wire this "support" would be heat-shrink, for larger wires (like we use) it would be a mechanical clamp around the wire or wire bundle, back from the joint. Most often, both techniques would be used in combination. A good illustration of "appropriate mechanical support" for a soldered joint is the humble hobby ESC - the heat shrink sleeve, apart from insulating the circuit board, supports the wires by binding them against the board and/or capacitor bodies, giving vital protection to the soldered joints.