I haven't tried this but it seems if you were to take a bit of sandpaper and rough up the termination pin before putting it in the grommet it would be tremendously more resistant against slippage and ohm skewing.
Roughing up the inside of the coil cup would help also, couple that with the pin...problem solved (theoretically).
Can't say I've tried that f1ve. But as you noted if I recall newer grommets are not as rough in texture as the original Kangers. It seems a good suggestion. For a time I was roughening up the lead ends with some micro wet/sand. Before that I risked torching the leads only. Both on the bit before installation. However, it definitely wouldn't overcome the slippery nature of silicone coupled with warmed juice. That's like grease on wet pavement.
I have a rough rubber stopper in front of me from a lab beaker I'm looking at. It's the perfect porosity, texture and firmness. I'm thinkin' like grade school erasers. Anything non-conductive of about that density. A million choices really. Anything but silicone.
So the next step which is really futzzy and time consuming would be to roughen up the actual grommets with something coarse enough to evenly texture the surface…but not enough to damage or compromise it. The right needle file (non-diamond) would do it. Too fiddly, right? I thought so.
How about somebody just go ahead and make some already, will ya?
Good luck all.
