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Widget for joining 3-core mains flex
|
|
| Coleman 2007-06-01, 3:25 am |
| I am in the UK. I want to ask for info about joining 3-core mains
flex on an appliance that may have to carry up to 3,000 Watts.
I usually extend the mains flex by soldering but the finished join is
too bulky when winding the flex or pulling it around a corner.
When I make my 3 joints I slightly offset each one so that it is not
beside another one. This helps make a slimmer overall joint but it
makes for a longer joint (about 2.5 to 3 inches) and with insulating
tape it is still too bulky.
(A) Is it safe to use heat shrink insulating tubing for each join
and have each join beside the other? Then I might use a single layer
of insulating tape to bind over and protect the 3 joins.
(B) Or is there some widget which can help with this? Perhaps a
small moulding which is made up of three very small metal tubes held
by moulded plastic to be close together but not touching. I could
put a wire into each end of a metal tube and then solder the wires
into it. (It's just an idea.)
Any info?
--
[max4: uk.diy alt.e.e. sci.e.e. sci.e.c.]
| |
|
|
"Coleman" <no@no-email.com> wrote in message
news:Xns99425BB8D990071F3M4@127.0.0.1...
>I am in the UK. I want to ask for info about joining 3-core mains
> flex on an appliance that may have to carry up to 3,000 Watts.
>
> I usually extend the mains flex by soldering but the finished join is
> too bulky when winding the flex or pulling it around a corner.
>
> When I make my 3 joints I slightly offset each one so that it is not
> beside another one. This helps make a slimmer overall joint but it
> makes for a longer joint (about 2.5 to 3 inches) and with insulating
> tape it is still too bulky.
>
> (A) Is it safe to use heat shrink insulating tubing for each join
> and have each join beside the other? Then I might use a single layer
> of insulating tape to bind over and protect the 3 joins.
>
> (B) Or is there some widget which can help with this? Perhaps a
> small moulding which is made up of three very small metal tubes held
> by moulded plastic to be close together but not touching. I could
> put a wire into each end of a metal tube and then solder the wires
> into it. (It's just an idea.)
>
> Any info?
>
> --
> Personally I would never extend an appliance lead in the way you describe
Nor would I pull leads around corners.
I would either replace the lead on the appliance with one long enough for my
purpose or use an extension lead fully unwound the get near to the point of
use and plug the appliance into the lead.
Where the lead on the appliance is very short say a couple of metres I use
an extension lead with a rubber socket on one end and an RCD plug on the
other
For the load you describe I would use a 2.5 t&e cable fully unwound
Tony
>
>
> [max4: uk.diy alt.e.e. sci.e.e. sci.e.c.]
| |
| Palindrome 2007-06-01, 9:25 am |
| Coleman wrote:
> I am in the UK. I want to ask for info about joining 3-core mains
> flex on an appliance that may have to carry up to 3,000 Watts.
>
> I usually extend the mains flex by soldering but the finished join is
> too bulky when winding the flex or pulling it around a corner.
>
> When I make my 3 joints I slightly offset each one so that it is not
> beside another one. This helps make a slimmer overall joint but it
> makes for a longer joint (about 2.5 to 3 inches) and with insulating
> tape it is still too bulky.
>
> (A) Is it safe to use heat shrink insulating tubing for each join
> and have each join beside the other? Then I might use a single layer
> of insulating tape to bind over and protect the 3 joins.
>
> (B) Or is there some widget which can help with this? Perhaps a
> small moulding which is made up of three very small metal tubes held
> by moulded plastic to be close together but not touching. I could
> put a wire into each end of a metal tube and then solder the wires
> into it. (It's just an idea.)
>
> Any info?
>
I don't know of any safe way of making an inline cable joint that will
allow the joined cable to be wound neatly on a small diameter drum. As
well as providing electrical insulation, the material has to provide
strain relief, abrasion resistance, water tighness and a load more.
The nearest thing is probably crimped sleeves used to make offset joints
to the wires, with heatshrink tubing insulating individual cores from
each other and an adhesive-lined heat-shrink extra-thick outer tube
overall. The outer tubing extending far enough along the cables for the
adhesive to give strain relief. But that will be much less flexible
that the typical continuous cable and the strain relief will be much
inferior to that provided by continous cable - particularly if the cable
is subject to self, or extrnal, heating. It may be ok for some fixed
wiring but certainly is not for cable being wound on a small diameter drum.
If the cables to be joined have clean and uncontaminated rubber outers,
self-vulcanising tape can be used in place of, or under, the
adhesive-lined outer tube. That will be able to take higher temperatures
and still maintain some form of strain relief. But is still far inferior
to that required for safety.
The only safe solution is to replace the whole of the two cables with a
single one.
--
Sue
| |
| Dave Plowman (News) 2007-06-01, 9:25 am |
| In article <Xns99425BB8D990071F3M4@127.0.0.1>,
Coleman <no@no-email.com> wrote:
> I am in the UK. I want to ask for info about joining 3-core mains
> flex on an appliance that may have to carry up to 3,000 Watts.
> I usually extend the mains flex by soldering but the finished join is
> too bulky when winding the flex or pulling it around a corner.
Why not just replace the flex with one of the length you want?
--
*Cover me. I'm changing lanes.
Dave Plowman dave@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
| |
| meow2222@care2.com 2007-06-01, 9:25 am |
| Coleman wrote:
> I am in the UK. I want to ask for info about joining 3-core mains
> flex on an appliance that may have to carry up to 3,000 Watts.
>
> I usually extend the mains flex by soldering but the finished join is
> too bulky when winding the flex or pulling it around a corner.
>
> When I make my 3 joints I slightly offset each one so that it is not
> beside another one. This helps make a slimmer overall joint but it
> makes for a longer joint (about 2.5 to 3 inches) and with insulating
> tape it is still too bulky.
>
> (A) Is it safe to use heat shrink insulating tubing for each join
> and have each join beside the other? Then I might use a single layer
> of insulating tape to bind over and protect the 3 joins.
>
> (B) Or is there some widget which can help with this? Perhaps a
> small moulding which is made up of three very small metal tubes held
> by moulded plastic to be close together but not touching. I could
> put a wire into each end of a metal tube and then solder the wires
> into it. (It's just an idea.)
>
> Any info?
http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php...ted_Flex_Joints
NT
| |
| Bob Mannix 2007-06-01, 9:25 am |
|
<meow2222@care2.com> wrote in message
news:1180694680.834209.209690@p77g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
> Coleman wrote:
>
>
> http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php...ted_Flex_Joints
>
>
But that is about twisted flex joints (the key is in the name :o) ) rather
than soldered joints, which is what the OP was talking about. Hardly ideal
but still not twisted flex joints and therefore not subject to the dangers
described in the article.
--
Bob Mannix
(anti-spam is as easy as 1-2-3 - not)
| |
|
| On Fri, 01 Jun 2007 09:00:59 +0100, Coleman <no@no-email.com> mused:
>I am in the UK. I want to ask for info about joining 3-core mains
>flex on an appliance that may have to carry up to 3,000 Watts.
>
>I usually extend the mains flex by soldering but the finished join is
>too bulky when winding the flex or pulling it around a corner.
>
>When I make my 3 joints I slightly offset each one so that it is not
>beside another one. This helps make a slimmer overall joint but it
>makes for a longer joint (about 2.5 to 3 inches) and with insulating
>tape it is still too bulky.
>
>(A) Is it safe to use heat shrink insulating tubing for each join
>and have each join beside the other? Then I might use a single layer
>of insulating tape to bind over and protect the 3 joins.
>
>(B) Or is there some widget which can help with this? Perhaps a
>small moulding which is made up of three very small metal tubes held
>by moulded plastic to be close together but not touching. I could
>put a wire into each end of a metal tube and then solder the wires
>into it. (It's just an idea.)
>
>Any info?
New flex with no joins.
I'd only entertain the idea of joining a mains flex if it were with a
plug and socket arrangement or soldered\crimped if it were on a piece
of equipment that wasn't dragged round corners on regular intervals.
--
Regards,
Stuart.
| |
| Palindrome 2007-06-01, 9:25 am |
| Bob Mannix wrote:
> <meow2222@care2.com> wrote in message
> news:1180694680.834209.209690@p77g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
> But that is about twisted flex joints (the key is in the name :o) ) rather
> than soldered joints, which is what the OP was talking about. Hardly ideal
> but still not twisted flex joints and therefore not subject to the dangers
> described in the article.
>
>
I would suggest that soldered joints covered with normal heat shrink and
insulating tape, "lack tensile strength, abrasion resistance, general
robustness, spillproofness (they can make a small spill live), good
insulation, petproofness & small childproofness."
The marginal advantage of soldering the joints has to be balanced
against the greater risk of failing during flexing, as the soldered
joint will form a flexure discontinuity and stress points.
Of course, soldering with acid flux would be an even greater problem.
--
Sue
| |
| Homer J Simpson 2007-06-01, 5:25 pm |
|
"Coleman" <no@no-email.com> wrote in message
news:Xns99425BB8D990071F3M4@127.0.0.1...
> I usually extend the mains flex by soldering but the finished join is
> too bulky when winding the flex or pulling it around a corner.
Then you are dangerous beyond belief. You cannot do this - it violates UK
regulations.
You must add a socket and a plug to connect the two cables.
Any other joining method will result in potential loss of fire insurance and
possible prosecution.
[color=darkred]
Why do you need such a long cable?
| |
| meow2222@care2.com 2007-06-01, 5:25 pm |
| On 1 Jun, 12:13, Palindrome <m...@privacy.net> wrote:
> Bob Mannix wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> I would suggest that soldered joints covered with normal heat shrink and
> insulating tape, "lack tensile strength, abrasion resistance, general
> robustness, spillproofness (they can make a small spill live), good
> insulation, petproofness & small childproofness."
>
> The marginal advantage of soldering the joints has to be balanced
> against the greater risk of failing during flexing, as the soldered
> joint will form a flexure discontinuity and stress points.
>
> Of course, soldering with acid flux would be an even greater problem.
>
> --
> Sue
I also thought it was pretty obvious what also applied to soldered
joints. Solder is weak stuff too, though I've not seen any significant
failures from soldering pretwisted flex (at LV). But not everyone
twists enough before soldering.
NT
| |
| Palindrome 2007-06-01, 5:25 pm |
| Homer J Simpson wrote:
> "Coleman" <no@no-email.com> wrote in message
> news:Xns99425BB8D990071F3M4@127.0.0.1...
>
>
>
>
> Then you are dangerous beyond belief. You cannot do this - it violates UK
> regulations.
>
> You must add a socket and a plug to connect the two cables.
>
> Any other joining method will result in potential loss of fire insurance and
> possible prosecution.
You can buy Permanent Mains Flex Connectors that don't involve plugs and
sockets, eg http://www.maplin.co.uk/images/Full/VJ81C_VJ82D.jpg
"Waterproof" versions are also available, for outdoor use.
--
Sue
| |
| Homer J Simpson 2007-06-01, 8:25 pm |
|
"Palindrome" <me9@privacy.net> wrote in message
news:js08i.234053$MW1.21635@fe03.news.easynews.com...
> You can buy Permanent Mains Flex Connectors that don't involve plugs and
> sockets, eg http://www.maplin.co.uk/images/Full/VJ81C_VJ82D.jpg
>
> "Waterproof" versions are also available, for outdoor use.
These are frowned on in many jurisdictions, however if they are approved in
the UK then they can be used there.
--
..
--
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
--
| |
| meow2222@care2.com 2007-06-02, 3:25 am |
| On 2 Jun, 02:02, "Homer J Simpson" <nob...@nowhere.com> wrote:
> "Palindrome" <m...@privacy.net> wrote in message
news:js08i.234053$MW1.21635@fe03.news.easynews.com...
>
[color=darkred]
> These are frowned on in many jurisdictions, however if they are approved in
> the UK then they can be used there.
Whats the problem with them? Ours all have cord grips.
NT
| |
| Palindrome 2007-06-02, 3:25 am |
| meow2222@care2.com wrote:
> On 2 Jun, 02:02, "Homer J Simpson" <nob...@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
>
> news:js08i.234053$MW1.21635@fe03.news.easynews.com...
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Whats the problem with them? Ours all have cord grips.
>
>
In the UK portable equipment has to be provided with a fitted plug - in
recognition of the fact that many people were incapable of correctly
fitting (and fusing) one themselves.
So, what are the chances that one of those will correctly choose and
wire one of the above? Or use a non-rugged one outdoors, drag it around
corners, let it fall into a bucket of water, etc?
Many (most?) do not have anything to limit the bending radius of the
cables at the point of entry close to the fixed cord grip. So strands of
the cores break, leading to the risk of fire, failure, etc.
Few are vapour-tight or even water-tight. As the are often dragged
around through damp grass, left in the shed, etc - there is a real risk
of corrosion..
Bear in mind that a typical application is to "repair" an electric
garden tool - where the user has cut the cable...
Replacing the two cables with a single, contiguous, one is by far the
best solution.
--
Sue
| |
| Dave Plowman (News) 2007-06-02, 9:25 am |
| In article <gA88i.576779$9i2.221096@fe06.news.easynews.com>,
Palindrome <me9@privacy.net> wrote:
> In the UK portable equipment has to be provided with a fitted plug - in
> recognition of the fact that many people were incapable of correctly
> fitting (and fusing) one themselves.
Or in recognition of the fact that everywhere else in the world gets a
fitted plug.
> So, what are the chances that one of those will correctly choose and
> wire one of the above? Or use a non-rugged one outdoors, drag it around
> corners, let it fall into a bucket of water, etc?
So?
> Many (most?) do not have anything to limit the bending radius of the
> cables at the point of entry close to the fixed cord grip. So strands of
> the cores break, leading to the risk of fire, failure, etc.
The ones I've seen have cable grip and strain relief at each end similar
to that found on plugs
> Few are vapour-tight or even water-tight. As the are often dragged
> around through damp grass, left in the shed, etc - there is a real risk
> of corrosion..
I'd suggest that most things likely to be used in the garden will use the
garden tool type of plugs since a ready made extension can be bought for
less than the cost of extending the lead.
> Bear in mind that a typical application is to "repair" an electric
> garden tool - where the user has cut the cable...
Maybe. But most garden tools have a plug/socket arrangement at the
appliance to make lead changing easy.
> Replacing the two cables with a single, contiguous, one is by far the
> best solution.
--
*If at first you do succeed, try not to look too astonished.
Dave Plowman dave@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
| |
| Andrew Gabriel 2007-06-02, 9:25 am |
| In article <4eec9119ecdave@davenoise.co.uk>,
"Dave Plowman (News)" <dave@davenoise.co.uk> writes:
>
> Maybe. But most garden tools have a plug/socket arrangement at the
> appliance to make lead changing easy.
That's a safety break, for many reasons.
If you drop something like a hedge trimmer, it won't be left
dangling around your nuts on the cord looped over your
shoulder.
--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]
| |
| Dave Plowman (News) 2007-06-02, 9:25 am |
| In article <46613a07$0$646$5a6aecb4@news.aaisp.net.uk>,
Andrew Gabriel <andrew@cucumber.demon.co.uk> wrote:
[color=darkred]
> That's a safety break, for many reasons.
> If you drop something like a hedge trimmer, it won't be left
> dangling around your nuts on the cord looped over your
> shoulder.
Indeed. Also makes storing the tool easier - or adding an extension. And
those extensions with the appliance plug/socket on them often can be
bought for less than the cost of the cable from the same store.
--
*See no evil, Hear no evil, Date no evil.
Dave Plowman dave@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
| |
| Coleman 2007-06-02, 5:25 pm |
| On 01 Jun 2007, Homer J Simpson <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
> "Coleman" <no@no-email.com> wrote in message
> news:Xns99425BB8D990071F3M4@127.0.0.1...
>
If the flex goes round a indoor doorpost and I pull the flex then I
am not putting much strain on it at all.
[color=darkred]
>
> Then you are dangerous beyond belief. You cannot do this - it
> violates UK regulations.
>
> You must add a socket and a plug to connect the two cables.
>
I will have to live in sin then! :-)
> Any other joining method will result in potential loss of fire
> insurance and possible prosecution.
>
> Why do you need such a long cable?
>
The cable on my fan heater is about 4 to 5 foot and is too short to
be used whre I want it to be.
I want it to extend it to about 10 foot.
| |
| Coleman 2007-06-02, 5:25 pm |
| On 02 Jun 2007, Palindrome <me9@privacy.net> wrote:
> meow2222@care2.com wrote:
> In the UK portable equipment has to be provided with a fitted plug
> - in recognition of the fact that many people were incapable of
> correctly fitting (and fusing) one themselves.
>
> So, what are the chances that one of those will correctly choose
> and wire one of the above? Or use a non-rugged one outdoors, drag
> it around corners, let it fall into a bucket of water, etc?
>
> Many (most?) do not have anything to limit the bending radius of
> the cables at the point of entry close to the fixed cord grip. So
> strands of the cores break, leading to the risk of fire, failure,
> etc.
>
> Few are vapour-tight or even water-tight. As the are often dragged
> around through damp grass, left in the shed, etc - there is a real
> risk of corrosion..
>
> Bear in mind that a typical application is to "repair" an electric
> garden tool - where the user has cut the cable...
>
>
> Replacing the two cables with a single, contiguous, one is by far
> the best solution.
>
It is the best but sometimes it is too long a job to open up the
appliance and to attach the new flex cores because of the way user-
unfriendly way in which the appliance has been designed.
| |
| Coleman 2007-06-02, 5:25 pm |
| On 01 Jun 2007, <meow2222@care2.com> wrote:
> On 1 Jun, 12:13, Palindrome <m...@privacy.net> wrote:
>
> I also thought it was pretty obvious what also applied to soldered
> joints. Solder is weak stuff too, though I've not seen any
> significant failures from soldering pretwisted flex (at LV). But
> not everyone twists enough before soldering.
>
>
ISTR there was a time when the different twists had their own names.
Maybe they still do.
Wasn't something like "Western Roll" one such name???
| |
|
| Coleman wrote:
> On 01 Jun 2007, Homer J Simpson <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
> If the flex goes round a indoor doorpost and I pull the flex then I
> am not putting much strain on it at all.
>
>
>
>
> I will have to live in sin then! :-)
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> The cable on my fan heater is about 4 to 5 foot and is too short to
> be used whre I want it to be.
>
> I want it to extend it to about 10 foot.
>
Hey, are you related to the Coleman company? I just bought
a 21 volt cordless drill from Coleman.?
P.S.
Can some one tell me what a flex is?
--
"I'm never wrong, once i thought i was, but was mistaken"
Real Programmers Do things like this.
http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5
| |
| Michael A. Terrell 2007-06-02, 8:25 pm |
| Jamie wrote:
> Hey, are you related to the Coleman company? I just bought
> a 21 volt cordless drill from Coleman.?
Coleman is an old AMERICAN company that made gasoline lanterns and
camping gear. Good luck with that drill. I was given several new 18 and
19.2 volt Coleman Powermate drills, along with eight batteries. The
piece of crap doesn't have enough torque to do much, and one snapped the
steel shank that connects the chuck to the gearbox. The other was
shipped without a wire from the PWM board, to one side of the trigger.
I fixed it, and made one complete set out of the pile of parts. I
couldn't even give it away. A $9 drill from Harbor Freight works a
WHOLE lot better.
> P.S.
> Can some one tell me what a flex is?
Are you really that dense? It is a British term for flexible line
cords. It has been discussed countless times on the electronics and
electrical engineering newsgroups.
--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.
Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida
| |
|
| Michael A. Terrell wrote:
> Jamie wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> Coleman is an old AMERICAN company that made gasoline lanterns and
> camping gear. Good luck with that drill. I was given several new 18 and
> 19.2 volt Coleman Powermate drills, along with eight batteries. The
> piece of crap doesn't have enough torque to do much, and one snapped the
> steel shank that connects the chuck to the gearbox. The other was
> shipped without a wire from the PWM board, to one side of the trigger.
> I fixed it, and made one complete set out of the pile of parts. I
> couldn't even give it away. A $9 drill from Harbor Freight works a
> WHOLE lot better.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Are you really that dense? It is a British term for flexible line
> cords. It has been discussed countless times on the electronics and
> electrical engineering newsgroups.
>
>
well, I'm not British and I have never heard of the term "FLEX"..
Here we have different names, maybe not the correct name but different
never the less.
SJO, Rubber cord, zip cord, curly cord and yes FLexible cord I can
comprehend, but when using the terms "FLEX" with out cord or what ever
afterwards kind of throws me. For all I know you could have been talking
about "GreenField", BX, BC, Seal Tight, what ever....
--
"I'm never wrong, once i thought i was, but was mistaken"
Real Programmers Do things like this.
http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5
| |
| Homer J Simpson 2007-06-03, 9:25 am |
|
"Jamie" <jamie_ka1lpa_not_valid_after_ka1lpa_@charter.net> wrote in message
news:n_j8i.23$Dr5.11@newsfe04.lga...
> P.S.
> Can some one tell me what a flex is?
Cabtyre.
| |
| Homer J Simpson 2007-06-03, 9:25 am |
|
"Coleman" <no@no-email.com> wrote in message
news:Xns9943CECC3190671F3M4@127.0.0.1...
>
> The cable on my fan heater is about 4 to 5 foot and is too short to
> be used whre I want it to be.
>
> I want it to extend it to about 10 foot.
Then a regular extension cord will work fine.
--
..
--
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
--
| |
|
| On 2007-06-01, Palindrome <me9@privacy.net> wrote:
> I would suggest that soldered joints covered with normal heat shrink and
> insulating tape, "lack tensile strength, abrasion resistance, general
> robustness, spillproofness (they can make a small spill live), good
> insulation, petproofness & small childproofness."
Methinks you worry overmuch. I've been doing this for years, although
it's solder, adhesive heatshrink (don't forget to put it on *before*
soldering the joint), more adhesive heatshrink over the whole thing
then insulating tape. OK, it isn't that bendy or pretty, but it'll
go on a drum and I've never, ever, had a joint fail, and there's one in
the lead for my big mains drill.
--
"If only I had known, I should have become a watchmaker." ~ Albert Einstein
[email me at huge {at} huge (dot) org <dot> uk]
| |
|
| On 2007-06-01, Homer J Simpson <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
> "Coleman" <no@no-email.com> wrote in message
> news:Xns99425BB8D990071F3M4@127.0.0.1...
>
>
> Then you are dangerous beyond belief. You cannot do this - it violates UK
> regulations.
>
> You must add a socket and a plug to connect the two cables.
>
> Any other joining method will result in potential loss of fire insurance and
> possible prosecution.
Jesus Christ, do you drive? You're about 300 times more likely to
die in a car crash. Get a grip.
--
"If only I had known, I should have become a watchmaker." ~ Albert Einstein
[email me at huge {at} huge (dot) org <dot> uk]
| |
|
| On 2007-06-02, Andrew Gabriel <andrew@cucumber.demon.co.uk> wrote:
> In article <4eec9119ecdave@davenoise.co.uk>,
> "Dave Plowman (News)" <dave@davenoise.co.uk> writes:
>
> That's a safety break, for many reasons.
> If you drop something like a hedge trimmer, it won't be left
> dangling around your nuts on the cord looped over your
> shoulder.
My recently purchased Bosch trimmer, although it had the inconvenient
"needs 2 hands" feature (the reason God created gaffer tape) did not
have a plug/socket, making it inconvenient to store. I fitted one.
--
"If only I had known, I should have become a watchmaker." ~ Albert Einstein
[email me at huge {at} huge (dot) org <dot> uk]
| |
| Palindrome 2007-06-03, 9:25 am |
| Huge wrote:
> On 2007-06-01, Palindrome <me9@privacy.net> wrote:
>
>
>
>
> Methinks you worry overmuch. I've been doing this for years, although
> it's solder, adhesive heatshrink (don't forget to put it on *before*
> soldering the joint), more adhesive heatshrink over the whole thing
> then insulating tape. OK, it isn't that bendy or pretty, but it'll
> go on a drum and I've never, ever, had a joint fail, and there's one in
> the lead for my big mains drill.
>
>
I did write "normal" - which you too seem to think is inadequate, as you
use adhesive heatshrink.
Whether it will go on the drum neatly depends on the size of the cable
and the drum.
I've used similar techniques to the one you mention where cable
replacement was impractical, eg re-joining the command and power cable
of a tethered submersible. That has been good enough to survive a few
weeks of fairly deep salt water immersion, etc. But the repair only ever
lasted a few weeks, no matter how carefully it was done. The cable alarm
would inevitably sound and the fault was inevitably at the join.. So no
way was it as good as the original cable, unjoined.
--
Sue
| |
| Andrew Gabriel 2007-06-03, 9:25 am |
| In article <f3rnv0$3gj$8@apophis.demon.co.uk>,
Huge <Huge@nowhere.much.invalid> writes:
> On 2007-06-02, Andrew Gabriel <andrew@cucumber.demon.co.uk> wrote:
>
> My recently purchased Bosch trimmer, although it had the inconvenient
> "needs 2 hands" feature (the reason God created gaffer tape) did not
> have a plug/socket, making it inconvenient to store. I fitted one.
I don't know if the safety break was a regulatory requirement,
although it was pretty universal. Does your Bosch have active
breaking (stops dead when you release the handle)? I guess that
would do the same thing, although the active breaking on two
lawnmowers I have both stopped working after a couple of years,
and now the blades just spin down under their own momentum when
the trigger is released.
--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]
| |
| Coleman 2007-06-03, 9:25 am |
| On 03 Jun 2007, Homer J Simpson <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
> "Coleman" <no@no-email.com> wrote in message
> news:Xns9943CECC3190671F3M4@127.0.0.1...
>
>
> Then a regular extension cord will work fine.
>
>
Yes it will but it s clumsy and inconvenient to get out each time!
| |
| Coleman 2007-06-03, 9:25 am |
| On 02 Jun 2007, Huge <Huge@nowhere.much.invalid> wrote:
> On 2007-06-01, Palindrome <me9@privacy.net> wrote:
>
>
> Methinks you worry overmuch. I've been doing this for years,
> although it's solder, adhesive heatshrink (don't forget to put it
> on *before* soldering the joint), more adhesive heatshrink over the
> whole thing then insulating tape. OK, it isn't that bendy or
> pretty, but it'll go on a drum and I've never, ever, had a joint
> fail, and there's one in the lead for my big mains drill.
>
>
I have been doing it for years too (without the heatshrink).
I am genuinely quite surprised that there are so many posts worrying
quite deeply about safety.
Of course what I want to do is less good than having a single piece of
flex. But this is not exactly HIGH risk in the circumstances I want to
use it the appliances in.
| |
| Eeyore 2007-06-03, 1:25 pm |
|
Andrew Gabriel wrote:
> Does your Bosch have active breaking (stops dead when you release the handle)?
That would be active braking.
break =/= brake
Graham
| |
| Palindrome 2007-06-03, 1:25 pm |
| Eeyore wrote:
>
> Andrew Gabriel wrote:
>
>
>
>
> That would be active braking.
>
> break =/= brake
>
Judging from his words, in Andrew's case it does appear that the brake
had been actively breaking...
--
Sue
| |
|
| Coleman wrote:
> Yes it will but it s clumsy and inconvenient to get out each time!
Then stop bodging things and install a proper, permanent socket where it
is needed.
Owain
| |
|
| On Sat, 02 Jun 2007 20:21:07 +0100, Coleman <no@no-email.com> mused:
>On 02 Jun 2007, Palindrome <me9@privacy.net> wrote:
>
>
>It is the best but sometimes it is too long a job to open up the
>appliance and to attach the new flex cores because of the way user-
>unfriendly way in which the appliance has been designed.
Make the join at the end near to the appliance so it's not dragged
around corners all the time.
--
Regards,
Stuart.
| |
| Homer J Simpson 2007-06-04, 3:25 am |
|
"Huge" <Huge@nowhere.much.invalid> wrote in message
news:f3rm0v$2ti$8@apophis.demon.co.uk...
>
> Jesus Christ, do you drive? You're about 300 times more likely to
> die in a car crash. Get a grip.
You are a dickhead. What part of "I'm sorry sir. Due to your haphazard
electrical 'repairs' your insurance does not cover the total loss of your
home" did you fail to understand?
--
..
--
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
..
--
| |
| Dave Plowman (News) 2007-06-04, 9:25 am |
| In article <x6M8i.75197$g63.48816@edtnps82>,
Homer J Simpson <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
> You are a dickhead. What part of "I'm sorry sir. Due to your haphazard
> electrical 'repairs' your insurance does not cover the total loss of
> your home" did you fail to understand?
Can you give some examples of this in the UK? It would be very difficult
to prove in a court of law.
--
*I love cats...they taste just like chicken.
Dave Plowman dave@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
| |
|
| On 2007-06-03, Andrew Gabriel <andrew@cucumber.demon.co.uk> wrote:
> In article <f3rnv0$3gj$8@apophis.demon.co.uk>,
> Huge <Huge@nowhere.much.invalid> writes:
>
> I don't know if the safety break was a regulatory requirement,
> although it was pretty universal. Does your Bosch have active
> breaking (stops dead when you release the handle)?
Yes.
--
"If only I had known, I should have become a watchmaker." ~ Albert Einstein
[email me at huge {at} huge (dot) org <dot> uk]
| |
| Andrew Gabriel 2007-06-04, 9:25 am |
| In article <4eed9c81efdave@davenoise.co.uk>,
"Dave Plowman (News)" <dave@davenoise.co.uk> writes:
> In article <x6M8i.75197$g63.48816@edtnps82>,
> Homer J Simpson <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
> Can you give some examples of this in the UK? It would be very difficult
> to prove in a court of law.
Not sure that's relevant -- I've never seen a [UK] policy which
excludes this anyway. Actually, policies often explicitly include
cover for DIY accidents.
--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]
| |
| Alex Coleman 2007-06-08, 1:25 pm |
| On 03 Jun 2007, Owain <owain47125@stirlingcity.coo.uk> wrote:
> Coleman wrote:
>
> Then stop bodging things and install a proper, permanent socket
> where it is needed.
>
> Owain
>
Bit drastic?
| |
|
|
"Alex Coleman" <no@no-email.com> wrote in message
news:Xns9949BC38CC60671F3M4@127.0.0.1...
> On 03 Jun 2007, Owain <owain47125@stirlingcity.coo.uk> wrote:
>
>
> Bit drastic?
I didn't see the beginning of this thread, but a technique that I frequently
use when joining wires is as follows. Look at the diagrams in Courier New
font, or they won't make much sense.
-------------- -------------------
Cable +---- wire_1 --------------------+ Cable
sheath +----------- wire_2 -------------+ sheath
+-------------------- wire_3 ----+
-------------- ---------------------
Firstly, strip a piece of the outer cable sheath off and put it to one side
to use later.
Then cut the wires as shown in the diagram. Bare the ends of the wires, and
solder the two ends of wire_1 together, and the same for the other wires.
Because the wires were cut to different lengths in this way, the soldered
joints are not close to each other, and cannot short together.
Now take the piece of sheath that you put to one side, slit it down the
side, and put it over the new joints. At this point, the cable should look
almost as if it had never been worked on.
-------------- ------------------------------------------------- -------------------
Cable | This is the piece of sheath that you | Cable
sheath | kept to one side, now used to | sheath
| cover the joint |
-------------- ------------------------------------------------- ---------------------
Now wind some electrician's tape around the full length of the sheath that
you have inserted, and an inch or so beyond each end. Better still would be
if you had slipped a piece of heat-shrink tubing over the wire before
soldering it together. The heat-shrink tubing should be about two inches
longer than the piece of sheathing you used to cover the joints.
_________________________________________________________________
---------/ / / / / / /
/-----------
/ / / Taped up with electrician's tape / /
----/ / / / / /
/____
/ / / / / / /
/
----------/_________________________________________________________________/------------
I have used the same technique on multi-wire cable - most recently on an
Ethernet cable that I had to cut to get through a small hole, then join
together again, because I didn't have the tool to put the connector back on.
In this case, with 8 wires, the total length of the connection was about 4
inches.
MikeC
| |
| Palindrome 2007-07-22, 1:25 pm |
| MikeC wrote:
> "Alex Coleman" <no@no-email.com> wrote in message
> news:Xns9949BC38CC60671F3M4@127.0.0.1...
>
>
>
> I didn't see the beginning of this thread, but a technique that I frequently
> use when joining wires is as follows. Look at the diagrams in Courier New
> font, or they won't make much sense.
>
> -------------- -------------------
> Cable +---- wire_1 --------------------+ Cable
> sheath +----------- wire_2 -------------+ sheath
> +-------------------- wire_3 ----+
> -------------- ---------------------
>
> Firstly, strip a piece of the outer cable sheath off and put it to one side
> to use later.
> Then cut the wires as shown in the diagram. Bare the ends of the wires, and
> solder the two ends of wire_1 together, and the same for the other wires.
> Because the wires were cut to different lengths in this way, the soldered
> joints are not close to each other, and cannot short together.
>
> Now take the piece of sheath that you put to one side, slit it down the
> side, and put it over the new joints. At this point, the cable should look
> almost as if it had never been worked on.
>
> -------------- ------------------------------------------------- -------------------
> Cable | This is the piece of sheath that you | Cable
> sheath | kept to one side, now used to | sheath
> | cover the joint |
> -------------- ------------------------------------------------- ---------------------
>
> Now wind some electrician's tape around the full length of the sheath that
> you have inserted, and an inch or so beyond each end. Better still would be
> if you had slipped a piece of heat-shrink tubing over the wire before
> soldering it together. The heat-shrink tubing should be about two inches
> longer than the piece of sheathing you used to cover the joints.
> _________________________________________________________________
> ---------/ / / / / / /
> /-----------
> / / / Taped up with electrician's tape / /
> ----/ / / / / /
> /____
> / / / / / / /
> /
> ----------/_________________________________________________________________/------------
>
> I have used the same technique on multi-wire cable - most recently on an
> Ethernet cable that I had to cut to get through a small hole, then join
> together again, because I didn't have the tool to put the connector back on.
> In this case, with 8 wires, the total length of the connection was about 4
> inches.
Fine for signal cables.
Lethal for mains flex.
The method provides virtually no strain relief for the conductors. Which
a continuous outer sheath provides as well as insulation.
Subject to even a modest pull, the conductors or soldered joints will
fail, potentially leading to a bare live conductor.
Any means of jointing mains flex has to provide strain relief for the
conductors comparable to that provided by the outer sheath of the
original cable.
--
Sue
| |
| John Rumm 2007-07-22, 5:25 pm |
| Palindrome wrote:
> Fine for signal cables.
It would also be ok for fixed house wiring in the uk, although
heatshrink would be a more appropriate sleeving material than insulating
tape.
> Lethal for mains flex.
Yup. If you had some form of enclosure with cord clamps though then it
would be fine.
> Any means of jointing mains flex has to provide strain relief for the
> conductors comparable to that provided by the outer sheath of the
> original cable.
--
Cheers,
John.
/=================================================================\
| Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk |
\=================================================================/
| |
|
| On Sat, 02 Jun 2007 20:23:15 +0100, Coleman wrote:
> On 01 Jun 2007, <meow2222@care2.com> wrote:
>
>
> ISTR there was a time when the different twists had their own names.
> Maybe they still do.
>
> Wasn't something like "Western Roll" one such name???
You're thinking of the Western Union splice:
http://www.tpub.com/content/neets/1...ss/14176_46.htm
The Western Roll is a high jump technique which preceded the Fosbury Flop.
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