theoldwizard1
Well-known member
This is NOT a Western Union splice. It had its day and it is gone.
As the title says I HATE Scotchloks. Sure they are quick but in a damp environment they will cause your wire to corrode and they just look nasty.
This how I handle splicing 12-20 AWG stranded wire, like you will typically find in a car/truck. The wires in these pictures are 14AWG automotive.
Let's start with the proper thing to cover your splices.
View media item 34799
Left to right, marine heat shrink, friction tape, Scotch 33+ and Scotch Linerless splicing tape. Not many years ago, friction tape was still widely used on most cars because it was cheap, gave a water resistant covering and it worked. You typically did not see it because it was used inside the harness which was covered "harness tape" (PVC tape with no adhesive). All work well, but I find the marine heat shrink the easiest to use and gives the nicest finish. Do NOT use the "buck a roll" stuff that you bought at HF. It will come apart.
Start by stripping off about 1" of insulation and installing about a 3" piece of heat shrink.
View media item 34800View media item 34801
Now twist together the bared ends. You need to get 1½-2 turns with each wire. You may need a bit more wire bared on each end for large diameter wire, a bit less for smaller diameter wire. Cover with marine heat shrink.
View media item 34803View media item 34804View media item 34805This type of splice will hold against a lot of force especially if marine heat shrink is used.
A very common thing to do is "tap" an existing wire. This hard to do because you typically don't have much slack. Cut your wire and bare about 1" on each end.
View media item 34807Take you new wire and strip about 4" off, but add 2" of heat shrink in the center of this area. Use 1 size lower heat shrink for this operation.
View media item 34808Twist on one end of the old (red) wire cooper with heat shrink (note larger size)
View media item 34809[/IMG]
Twist the other old (red) wire on the open end and cover with heat shrink.
View media item 34811
Another way to do the same using an uninsulated **** splice. Bare about 3/4" of the new and old wire. Twist together. Trim to the appropriate length to fit in a **** splice that is one size larger (14AWG wire, 10-12AWG **** splice)
View media item 34812CUT OFF the new wire (blue) at the splice (left hand side) and add heat shrink but don't shrink just yet. Repeat baring, twisting, triming and crimping with the new (blue) wire and and old (red) on the right hand side.
View media item 34813Apply heat shrink.
View media item 34814
None of these are anywhere near as quick as a Scotchlok. Tapping is ALWAYS more difficult because you never have enough room/spare wire to work.
As the title says I HATE Scotchloks. Sure they are quick but in a damp environment they will cause your wire to corrode and they just look nasty.
This how I handle splicing 12-20 AWG stranded wire, like you will typically find in a car/truck. The wires in these pictures are 14AWG automotive.
Let's start with the proper thing to cover your splices.
View media item 34799
Left to right, marine heat shrink, friction tape, Scotch 33+ and Scotch Linerless splicing tape. Not many years ago, friction tape was still widely used on most cars because it was cheap, gave a water resistant covering and it worked. You typically did not see it because it was used inside the harness which was covered "harness tape" (PVC tape with no adhesive). All work well, but I find the marine heat shrink the easiest to use and gives the nicest finish. Do NOT use the "buck a roll" stuff that you bought at HF. It will come apart.
Start by stripping off about 1" of insulation and installing about a 3" piece of heat shrink.
View media item 34800View media item 34801
Now twist together the bared ends. You need to get 1½-2 turns with each wire. You may need a bit more wire bared on each end for large diameter wire, a bit less for smaller diameter wire. Cover with marine heat shrink.
View media item 34803View media item 34804View media item 34805This type of splice will hold against a lot of force especially if marine heat shrink is used.
A very common thing to do is "tap" an existing wire. This hard to do because you typically don't have much slack. Cut your wire and bare about 1" on each end.
View media item 34807Take you new wire and strip about 4" off, but add 2" of heat shrink in the center of this area. Use 1 size lower heat shrink for this operation.
View media item 34808Twist on one end of the old (red) wire cooper with heat shrink (note larger size)
View media item 34809[/IMG]
Twist the other old (red) wire on the open end and cover with heat shrink.
View media item 34811
Another way to do the same using an uninsulated **** splice. Bare about 3/4" of the new and old wire. Twist together. Trim to the appropriate length to fit in a **** splice that is one size larger (14AWG wire, 10-12AWG **** splice)
View media item 34812CUT OFF the new wire (blue) at the splice (left hand side) and add heat shrink but don't shrink just yet. Repeat baring, twisting, triming and crimping with the new (blue) wire and and old (red) on the right hand side.
View media item 34813Apply heat shrink.
View media item 34814
None of these are anywhere near as quick as a Scotchlok. Tapping is ALWAYS more difficult because you never have enough room/spare wire to work.
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