rick carpenter
Well-known member
I've been reading up on crimp vs crimp & solder vs solder for electrical terminals. Crimping is the way to go. But... that made me wonder about a solder job I did a while back.
I had cut through my circular saw power cord. I did a lot of looking online before proceeding. I made two offset Western Union splices, soldered each, electrical taped them individually, shrink wrapped both together, covered that in bonding rubber tape to include plenty enough of the original insulation, electrical taped over that, and shrink wrapped both tape ends. It's not as bulky as it sounds! It has worked well for under a year now but I'm very careful not to pull against the splice. Does this splice sound OK for the long run?
The pic also shows a home-made heat shield that I used doing this. I took a door shim and spray glued three alternating layers of cloth and tin foil.
I had cut through my circular saw power cord. I did a lot of looking online before proceeding. I made two offset Western Union splices, soldered each, electrical taped them individually, shrink wrapped both together, covered that in bonding rubber tape to include plenty enough of the original insulation, electrical taped over that, and shrink wrapped both tape ends. It's not as bulky as it sounds! It has worked well for under a year now but I'm very careful not to pull against the splice. Does this splice sound OK for the long run?
The pic also shows a home-made heat shield that I used doing this. I took a door shim and spray glued three alternating layers of cloth and tin foil.
