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Can a novice safely splice in wire to lengthen 5V charging cable?



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9












$begingroup$


I have a 5V 1500 mA charging/power cord for a camera that was too short to reach the mounting position I need, so at the suggestion of my electrical engineer father, I decided to try to lengthen it. He said to just twist and tape the wires together but I wanted a sleeker look so I decided to try soldering and heat shrinking. The cord will be left plugged in and powering the camera 24/7. The original cord is 20 awg but the closest I could find was 4 extra feet of 18 awg lamp cord (2 wires in both). So I cut the original, stripped the 4 ends between 1/4 - 1/2 inch back, spread the strands out, butted and twisted them.



Next, I soldered them together and this is the part I feel uncomfortable with. For starters this was only like my second time ever soldering and the first time with this iron. The first joint looked ok, maybe slightly light on solder - it didn’t flow very well - but it was holding together against a gentle tug. The second was my worst joint, it ended up with a little too much solder and kind of thick. I figured out that my iron wasn’t hot enough even though it was set at about 380-390. After turning up the heat, it flowed into the next two, but the tips of the insulation on the original wire melted a tad (see photo). Is that bad?



3rd & 4th joint



Next I applied heat shrink over each individual joint. The heat shrink seemed a little thin so I also wrapped a little electrical tape around one joint on each end of the spliced length for extra insulation. Then I applied larger heat shrink over both wires together on each end. Then finished it off with white electrical tape just to match the cord color.



Charger final wrap



My question is, is this safe to use? I tried plugging it in and the device indicates it is charging. I feel pretty confident it’s not going to short with two layers of heat shrink and electrical tape separating the conductors. But being a novice, I’m just looking at my taped up cord picturing a fireman holding it up for a look in the remains of my burnt home. I’m most worried my solder joints aren’t good enough and might cause a dangerous resistive connection.










share|improve this question







New contributor




xr280xr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$








  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Is this connection on the 5V line? Then i see no problem with this, the soldering you did looks good and sturdy. How much longer did you make the wire? There could be some problems with voltage loss, but if it indicate that it is charging then i guess it's not a big deal.
    $endgroup$
    – Linkyyy
    yesterday






  • 7




    $begingroup$
    Looks good. I would have personally staggered the joints slightly, so that they were not directly next to each other.
    $endgroup$
    – HandyHowie
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Linkyyy, I added 4 ft. I have another identical, unmodified Charger. Can I compare the output with a multimeter? HandyHowie, good idea, I didn’t think of that. Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    yesterday






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    @xr280xr To be useful voltage comparisons would need to be made under load.
    $endgroup$
    – Russell McMahon
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The solder provides the electrical connection. You can see if it is effective by measuring the voltage drop across the splice. You should not drop more than 0.10 V, if I recall correctly. The twisted wires provide the mechanical connection but it is not very strong. I think you should have crimped to provide a mechanical connection that would be resilient to to flexing, twisting and pulling. (In the past I had to perform a similar repair on a truck. The main engine harness was mechanically crimped, and voltage drops caused rough idles. I needed to soldier to improve the electrical connection).
    $endgroup$
    – jww
    23 hours ago




















9












$begingroup$


I have a 5V 1500 mA charging/power cord for a camera that was too short to reach the mounting position I need, so at the suggestion of my electrical engineer father, I decided to try to lengthen it. He said to just twist and tape the wires together but I wanted a sleeker look so I decided to try soldering and heat shrinking. The cord will be left plugged in and powering the camera 24/7. The original cord is 20 awg but the closest I could find was 4 extra feet of 18 awg lamp cord (2 wires in both). So I cut the original, stripped the 4 ends between 1/4 - 1/2 inch back, spread the strands out, butted and twisted them.



Next, I soldered them together and this is the part I feel uncomfortable with. For starters this was only like my second time ever soldering and the first time with this iron. The first joint looked ok, maybe slightly light on solder - it didn’t flow very well - but it was holding together against a gentle tug. The second was my worst joint, it ended up with a little too much solder and kind of thick. I figured out that my iron wasn’t hot enough even though it was set at about 380-390. After turning up the heat, it flowed into the next two, but the tips of the insulation on the original wire melted a tad (see photo). Is that bad?



3rd & 4th joint



Next I applied heat shrink over each individual joint. The heat shrink seemed a little thin so I also wrapped a little electrical tape around one joint on each end of the spliced length for extra insulation. Then I applied larger heat shrink over both wires together on each end. Then finished it off with white electrical tape just to match the cord color.



Charger final wrap



My question is, is this safe to use? I tried plugging it in and the device indicates it is charging. I feel pretty confident it’s not going to short with two layers of heat shrink and electrical tape separating the conductors. But being a novice, I’m just looking at my taped up cord picturing a fireman holding it up for a look in the remains of my burnt home. I’m most worried my solder joints aren’t good enough and might cause a dangerous resistive connection.










share|improve this question







New contributor




xr280xr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$








  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Is this connection on the 5V line? Then i see no problem with this, the soldering you did looks good and sturdy. How much longer did you make the wire? There could be some problems with voltage loss, but if it indicate that it is charging then i guess it's not a big deal.
    $endgroup$
    – Linkyyy
    yesterday






  • 7




    $begingroup$
    Looks good. I would have personally staggered the joints slightly, so that they were not directly next to each other.
    $endgroup$
    – HandyHowie
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Linkyyy, I added 4 ft. I have another identical, unmodified Charger. Can I compare the output with a multimeter? HandyHowie, good idea, I didn’t think of that. Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    yesterday






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    @xr280xr To be useful voltage comparisons would need to be made under load.
    $endgroup$
    – Russell McMahon
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The solder provides the electrical connection. You can see if it is effective by measuring the voltage drop across the splice. You should not drop more than 0.10 V, if I recall correctly. The twisted wires provide the mechanical connection but it is not very strong. I think you should have crimped to provide a mechanical connection that would be resilient to to flexing, twisting and pulling. (In the past I had to perform a similar repair on a truck. The main engine harness was mechanically crimped, and voltage drops caused rough idles. I needed to soldier to improve the electrical connection).
    $endgroup$
    – jww
    23 hours ago
















9












9








9





$begingroup$


I have a 5V 1500 mA charging/power cord for a camera that was too short to reach the mounting position I need, so at the suggestion of my electrical engineer father, I decided to try to lengthen it. He said to just twist and tape the wires together but I wanted a sleeker look so I decided to try soldering and heat shrinking. The cord will be left plugged in and powering the camera 24/7. The original cord is 20 awg but the closest I could find was 4 extra feet of 18 awg lamp cord (2 wires in both). So I cut the original, stripped the 4 ends between 1/4 - 1/2 inch back, spread the strands out, butted and twisted them.



Next, I soldered them together and this is the part I feel uncomfortable with. For starters this was only like my second time ever soldering and the first time with this iron. The first joint looked ok, maybe slightly light on solder - it didn’t flow very well - but it was holding together against a gentle tug. The second was my worst joint, it ended up with a little too much solder and kind of thick. I figured out that my iron wasn’t hot enough even though it was set at about 380-390. After turning up the heat, it flowed into the next two, but the tips of the insulation on the original wire melted a tad (see photo). Is that bad?



3rd & 4th joint



Next I applied heat shrink over each individual joint. The heat shrink seemed a little thin so I also wrapped a little electrical tape around one joint on each end of the spliced length for extra insulation. Then I applied larger heat shrink over both wires together on each end. Then finished it off with white electrical tape just to match the cord color.



Charger final wrap



My question is, is this safe to use? I tried plugging it in and the device indicates it is charging. I feel pretty confident it’s not going to short with two layers of heat shrink and electrical tape separating the conductors. But being a novice, I’m just looking at my taped up cord picturing a fireman holding it up for a look in the remains of my burnt home. I’m most worried my solder joints aren’t good enough and might cause a dangerous resistive connection.










share|improve this question







New contributor




xr280xr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$




I have a 5V 1500 mA charging/power cord for a camera that was too short to reach the mounting position I need, so at the suggestion of my electrical engineer father, I decided to try to lengthen it. He said to just twist and tape the wires together but I wanted a sleeker look so I decided to try soldering and heat shrinking. The cord will be left plugged in and powering the camera 24/7. The original cord is 20 awg but the closest I could find was 4 extra feet of 18 awg lamp cord (2 wires in both). So I cut the original, stripped the 4 ends between 1/4 - 1/2 inch back, spread the strands out, butted and twisted them.



Next, I soldered them together and this is the part I feel uncomfortable with. For starters this was only like my second time ever soldering and the first time with this iron. The first joint looked ok, maybe slightly light on solder - it didn’t flow very well - but it was holding together against a gentle tug. The second was my worst joint, it ended up with a little too much solder and kind of thick. I figured out that my iron wasn’t hot enough even though it was set at about 380-390. After turning up the heat, it flowed into the next two, but the tips of the insulation on the original wire melted a tad (see photo). Is that bad?



3rd & 4th joint



Next I applied heat shrink over each individual joint. The heat shrink seemed a little thin so I also wrapped a little electrical tape around one joint on each end of the spliced length for extra insulation. Then I applied larger heat shrink over both wires together on each end. Then finished it off with white electrical tape just to match the cord color.



Charger final wrap



My question is, is this safe to use? I tried plugging it in and the device indicates it is charging. I feel pretty confident it’s not going to short with two layers of heat shrink and electrical tape separating the conductors. But being a novice, I’m just looking at my taped up cord picturing a fireman holding it up for a look in the remains of my burnt home. I’m most worried my solder joints aren’t good enough and might cause a dangerous resistive connection.







soldering low-voltage






share|improve this question







New contributor




xr280xr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




xr280xr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




xr280xr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked yesterday









xr280xrxr280xr

1483




1483




New contributor




xr280xr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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New contributor





xr280xr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






xr280xr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Is this connection on the 5V line? Then i see no problem with this, the soldering you did looks good and sturdy. How much longer did you make the wire? There could be some problems with voltage loss, but if it indicate that it is charging then i guess it's not a big deal.
    $endgroup$
    – Linkyyy
    yesterday






  • 7




    $begingroup$
    Looks good. I would have personally staggered the joints slightly, so that they were not directly next to each other.
    $endgroup$
    – HandyHowie
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Linkyyy, I added 4 ft. I have another identical, unmodified Charger. Can I compare the output with a multimeter? HandyHowie, good idea, I didn’t think of that. Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    yesterday






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    @xr280xr To be useful voltage comparisons would need to be made under load.
    $endgroup$
    – Russell McMahon
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The solder provides the electrical connection. You can see if it is effective by measuring the voltage drop across the splice. You should not drop more than 0.10 V, if I recall correctly. The twisted wires provide the mechanical connection but it is not very strong. I think you should have crimped to provide a mechanical connection that would be resilient to to flexing, twisting and pulling. (In the past I had to perform a similar repair on a truck. The main engine harness was mechanically crimped, and voltage drops caused rough idles. I needed to soldier to improve the electrical connection).
    $endgroup$
    – jww
    23 hours ago
















  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Is this connection on the 5V line? Then i see no problem with this, the soldering you did looks good and sturdy. How much longer did you make the wire? There could be some problems with voltage loss, but if it indicate that it is charging then i guess it's not a big deal.
    $endgroup$
    – Linkyyy
    yesterday






  • 7




    $begingroup$
    Looks good. I would have personally staggered the joints slightly, so that they were not directly next to each other.
    $endgroup$
    – HandyHowie
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Linkyyy, I added 4 ft. I have another identical, unmodified Charger. Can I compare the output with a multimeter? HandyHowie, good idea, I didn’t think of that. Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    yesterday






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    @xr280xr To be useful voltage comparisons would need to be made under load.
    $endgroup$
    – Russell McMahon
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    The solder provides the electrical connection. You can see if it is effective by measuring the voltage drop across the splice. You should not drop more than 0.10 V, if I recall correctly. The twisted wires provide the mechanical connection but it is not very strong. I think you should have crimped to provide a mechanical connection that would be resilient to to flexing, twisting and pulling. (In the past I had to perform a similar repair on a truck. The main engine harness was mechanically crimped, and voltage drops caused rough idles. I needed to soldier to improve the electrical connection).
    $endgroup$
    – jww
    23 hours ago










4




4




$begingroup$
Is this connection on the 5V line? Then i see no problem with this, the soldering you did looks good and sturdy. How much longer did you make the wire? There could be some problems with voltage loss, but if it indicate that it is charging then i guess it's not a big deal.
$endgroup$
– Linkyyy
yesterday




$begingroup$
Is this connection on the 5V line? Then i see no problem with this, the soldering you did looks good and sturdy. How much longer did you make the wire? There could be some problems with voltage loss, but if it indicate that it is charging then i guess it's not a big deal.
$endgroup$
– Linkyyy
yesterday




7




7




$begingroup$
Looks good. I would have personally staggered the joints slightly, so that they were not directly next to each other.
$endgroup$
– HandyHowie
yesterday




$begingroup$
Looks good. I would have personally staggered the joints slightly, so that they were not directly next to each other.
$endgroup$
– HandyHowie
yesterday




1




1




$begingroup$
Linkyyy, I added 4 ft. I have another identical, unmodified Charger. Can I compare the output with a multimeter? HandyHowie, good idea, I didn’t think of that. Thanks!
$endgroup$
– xr280xr
yesterday




$begingroup$
Linkyyy, I added 4 ft. I have another identical, unmodified Charger. Can I compare the output with a multimeter? HandyHowie, good idea, I didn’t think of that. Thanks!
$endgroup$
– xr280xr
yesterday




3




3




$begingroup$
@xr280xr To be useful voltage comparisons would need to be made under load.
$endgroup$
– Russell McMahon
yesterday




$begingroup$
@xr280xr To be useful voltage comparisons would need to be made under load.
$endgroup$
– Russell McMahon
yesterday




1




1




$begingroup$
The solder provides the electrical connection. You can see if it is effective by measuring the voltage drop across the splice. You should not drop more than 0.10 V, if I recall correctly. The twisted wires provide the mechanical connection but it is not very strong. I think you should have crimped to provide a mechanical connection that would be resilient to to flexing, twisting and pulling. (In the past I had to perform a similar repair on a truck. The main engine harness was mechanically crimped, and voltage drops caused rough idles. I needed to soldier to improve the electrical connection).
$endgroup$
– jww
23 hours ago






$begingroup$
The solder provides the electrical connection. You can see if it is effective by measuring the voltage drop across the splice. You should not drop more than 0.10 V, if I recall correctly. The twisted wires provide the mechanical connection but it is not very strong. I think you should have crimped to provide a mechanical connection that would be resilient to to flexing, twisting and pulling. (In the past I had to perform a similar repair on a truck. The main engine harness was mechanically crimped, and voltage drops caused rough idles. I needed to soldier to improve the electrical connection).
$endgroup$
– jww
23 hours ago












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















20












$begingroup$

For a first attempt you have achieved an excellent result.

The result should be safe and reliable.
Cosmetically the result could be somewhat better but I have seen far far far worse in use and working long term.



The key points to consider are:





  • The output wires should connect to the same input wires as they did before the extension was made. Yours obviously do as the charger charges. However, this is an easy thing to get wrong and people sometimes do. The result may be as minor as "won't work" or as major as "charged device and/or charger destroyed".



    It pays to establish some way of determining which is the right and wrong way of connecting the wires. This is even more crucial when there are more than two wires.



    You obviously got it right :-).




  • The connections should be mechanically robust and not rely on the solder for strength.



    You got it right.




  • The solder joints should meet guidelines for good joints.

    Solder should flow and "wet" wire in both joined wires, be of correct appearance (smooth and shiny for lead 60-40 solder, less shiny for lead free solder) wires. Not too much and not too little solder.



    You did well enough.

    Your competence will improve with experience.




  • The insulation should cover each bare conductor separately and completely. Yours does.



    You did not show the heatshrink. It should extend past the conductor at both ends and when shrunk should not be mechanically removable without destroying it.




  • The outer insulator should be robust enough to maintain overall insulation integrity for more than the desired lifetime of the connection.



    Yours sounds good. The outer tape MAY fray and unwind somewhat over time but the inner large heatshrink should render this unimportant.






The most significant improvement you could aim at is improving the joining of the two wires. What you have done is entirely acceptable - but, the bare wire outside the joint proper serves no great purpose. This can occur due to insulation pullback/shrinkage when soldering. This is minimised by learning to solder faster :-).



A way to minimise join length is to decide how many wraps each wire will make around the other 'target wire", decide how much target wire length is needed, and start winding one wire around the other at the desired length away from the target wire's insulation - ie usually quire close. When both wires have been wrapped onto their "target" wires there is no bare exposed wire between the join and insulation on either wire.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$









  • 5




    $begingroup$
    The joint looks fine, but one issue not mentioned in this answer is that because the soldered joints are much stiffer than the rest of the power cord, if the cord is regularly bent or pulled the wires are likely to eventually snap at the end of the soldered section. If this likely to be a problem, you would be better using something like a simple in-line switch (e.g. ebay.co.uk/b/Inline-Cord-Switch-in-Home-Electrical-Fittings/… to join the wires.You could fix the switch permanently in the "on" position, of course.
    $endgroup$
    – alephzero
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    Great information! Just what I was looking for. In my case the original cord had a dashed line marking on one wire and the lamp cord had a rounded edge for one wire so I used those to keep track of the routing. I did overlap the heat shrink and it is very tight. I’ll try your advice next time. I had trouble twisting the wires all the way to the base because of the double wires and because I didn’t measure them exactly. Alephzero thanks for that point. It will be fixed to a wall.
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Great answer. One thing I would add is, whether or not a novice can do it depends on the wire used, because that can vary. The wire pictured here looks like a good gauge wire with good insulation, but some 5v charging cables are pretty low quality and nearly impossible to even prep for soldering.
    $endgroup$
    – dogoncouch
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    You can also provide strain relief for a stiff soldered connection by staggering the joints, a layer of heat shrink over each joint, a spring(plastic if voltage was significant) and a second layer of heat shrink over the lot. If you weren't using the electrical tape for color, I'd say put it under the heat shrink for a seamless look. The main problem with electrical tape is long term stability/unwrapping and this prevents that.
    $endgroup$
    – K H
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @KH wish I had thought of that. I have some clear heat shrink.
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    23 hours ago












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1 Answer
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active

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









20












$begingroup$

For a first attempt you have achieved an excellent result.

The result should be safe and reliable.
Cosmetically the result could be somewhat better but I have seen far far far worse in use and working long term.



The key points to consider are:





  • The output wires should connect to the same input wires as they did before the extension was made. Yours obviously do as the charger charges. However, this is an easy thing to get wrong and people sometimes do. The result may be as minor as "won't work" or as major as "charged device and/or charger destroyed".



    It pays to establish some way of determining which is the right and wrong way of connecting the wires. This is even more crucial when there are more than two wires.



    You obviously got it right :-).




  • The connections should be mechanically robust and not rely on the solder for strength.



    You got it right.




  • The solder joints should meet guidelines for good joints.

    Solder should flow and "wet" wire in both joined wires, be of correct appearance (smooth and shiny for lead 60-40 solder, less shiny for lead free solder) wires. Not too much and not too little solder.



    You did well enough.

    Your competence will improve with experience.




  • The insulation should cover each bare conductor separately and completely. Yours does.



    You did not show the heatshrink. It should extend past the conductor at both ends and when shrunk should not be mechanically removable without destroying it.




  • The outer insulator should be robust enough to maintain overall insulation integrity for more than the desired lifetime of the connection.



    Yours sounds good. The outer tape MAY fray and unwind somewhat over time but the inner large heatshrink should render this unimportant.






The most significant improvement you could aim at is improving the joining of the two wires. What you have done is entirely acceptable - but, the bare wire outside the joint proper serves no great purpose. This can occur due to insulation pullback/shrinkage when soldering. This is minimised by learning to solder faster :-).



A way to minimise join length is to decide how many wraps each wire will make around the other 'target wire", decide how much target wire length is needed, and start winding one wire around the other at the desired length away from the target wire's insulation - ie usually quire close. When both wires have been wrapped onto their "target" wires there is no bare exposed wire between the join and insulation on either wire.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$









  • 5




    $begingroup$
    The joint looks fine, but one issue not mentioned in this answer is that because the soldered joints are much stiffer than the rest of the power cord, if the cord is regularly bent or pulled the wires are likely to eventually snap at the end of the soldered section. If this likely to be a problem, you would be better using something like a simple in-line switch (e.g. ebay.co.uk/b/Inline-Cord-Switch-in-Home-Electrical-Fittings/… to join the wires.You could fix the switch permanently in the "on" position, of course.
    $endgroup$
    – alephzero
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    Great information! Just what I was looking for. In my case the original cord had a dashed line marking on one wire and the lamp cord had a rounded edge for one wire so I used those to keep track of the routing. I did overlap the heat shrink and it is very tight. I’ll try your advice next time. I had trouble twisting the wires all the way to the base because of the double wires and because I didn’t measure them exactly. Alephzero thanks for that point. It will be fixed to a wall.
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Great answer. One thing I would add is, whether or not a novice can do it depends on the wire used, because that can vary. The wire pictured here looks like a good gauge wire with good insulation, but some 5v charging cables are pretty low quality and nearly impossible to even prep for soldering.
    $endgroup$
    – dogoncouch
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    You can also provide strain relief for a stiff soldered connection by staggering the joints, a layer of heat shrink over each joint, a spring(plastic if voltage was significant) and a second layer of heat shrink over the lot. If you weren't using the electrical tape for color, I'd say put it under the heat shrink for a seamless look. The main problem with electrical tape is long term stability/unwrapping and this prevents that.
    $endgroup$
    – K H
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @KH wish I had thought of that. I have some clear heat shrink.
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    23 hours ago
















20












$begingroup$

For a first attempt you have achieved an excellent result.

The result should be safe and reliable.
Cosmetically the result could be somewhat better but I have seen far far far worse in use and working long term.



The key points to consider are:





  • The output wires should connect to the same input wires as they did before the extension was made. Yours obviously do as the charger charges. However, this is an easy thing to get wrong and people sometimes do. The result may be as minor as "won't work" or as major as "charged device and/or charger destroyed".



    It pays to establish some way of determining which is the right and wrong way of connecting the wires. This is even more crucial when there are more than two wires.



    You obviously got it right :-).




  • The connections should be mechanically robust and not rely on the solder for strength.



    You got it right.




  • The solder joints should meet guidelines for good joints.

    Solder should flow and "wet" wire in both joined wires, be of correct appearance (smooth and shiny for lead 60-40 solder, less shiny for lead free solder) wires. Not too much and not too little solder.



    You did well enough.

    Your competence will improve with experience.




  • The insulation should cover each bare conductor separately and completely. Yours does.



    You did not show the heatshrink. It should extend past the conductor at both ends and when shrunk should not be mechanically removable without destroying it.




  • The outer insulator should be robust enough to maintain overall insulation integrity for more than the desired lifetime of the connection.



    Yours sounds good. The outer tape MAY fray and unwind somewhat over time but the inner large heatshrink should render this unimportant.






The most significant improvement you could aim at is improving the joining of the two wires. What you have done is entirely acceptable - but, the bare wire outside the joint proper serves no great purpose. This can occur due to insulation pullback/shrinkage when soldering. This is minimised by learning to solder faster :-).



A way to minimise join length is to decide how many wraps each wire will make around the other 'target wire", decide how much target wire length is needed, and start winding one wire around the other at the desired length away from the target wire's insulation - ie usually quire close. When both wires have been wrapped onto their "target" wires there is no bare exposed wire between the join and insulation on either wire.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$









  • 5




    $begingroup$
    The joint looks fine, but one issue not mentioned in this answer is that because the soldered joints are much stiffer than the rest of the power cord, if the cord is regularly bent or pulled the wires are likely to eventually snap at the end of the soldered section. If this likely to be a problem, you would be better using something like a simple in-line switch (e.g. ebay.co.uk/b/Inline-Cord-Switch-in-Home-Electrical-Fittings/… to join the wires.You could fix the switch permanently in the "on" position, of course.
    $endgroup$
    – alephzero
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    Great information! Just what I was looking for. In my case the original cord had a dashed line marking on one wire and the lamp cord had a rounded edge for one wire so I used those to keep track of the routing. I did overlap the heat shrink and it is very tight. I’ll try your advice next time. I had trouble twisting the wires all the way to the base because of the double wires and because I didn’t measure them exactly. Alephzero thanks for that point. It will be fixed to a wall.
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Great answer. One thing I would add is, whether or not a novice can do it depends on the wire used, because that can vary. The wire pictured here looks like a good gauge wire with good insulation, but some 5v charging cables are pretty low quality and nearly impossible to even prep for soldering.
    $endgroup$
    – dogoncouch
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    You can also provide strain relief for a stiff soldered connection by staggering the joints, a layer of heat shrink over each joint, a spring(plastic if voltage was significant) and a second layer of heat shrink over the lot. If you weren't using the electrical tape for color, I'd say put it under the heat shrink for a seamless look. The main problem with electrical tape is long term stability/unwrapping and this prevents that.
    $endgroup$
    – K H
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @KH wish I had thought of that. I have some clear heat shrink.
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    23 hours ago














20












20








20





$begingroup$

For a first attempt you have achieved an excellent result.

The result should be safe and reliable.
Cosmetically the result could be somewhat better but I have seen far far far worse in use and working long term.



The key points to consider are:





  • The output wires should connect to the same input wires as they did before the extension was made. Yours obviously do as the charger charges. However, this is an easy thing to get wrong and people sometimes do. The result may be as minor as "won't work" or as major as "charged device and/or charger destroyed".



    It pays to establish some way of determining which is the right and wrong way of connecting the wires. This is even more crucial when there are more than two wires.



    You obviously got it right :-).




  • The connections should be mechanically robust and not rely on the solder for strength.



    You got it right.




  • The solder joints should meet guidelines for good joints.

    Solder should flow and "wet" wire in both joined wires, be of correct appearance (smooth and shiny for lead 60-40 solder, less shiny for lead free solder) wires. Not too much and not too little solder.



    You did well enough.

    Your competence will improve with experience.




  • The insulation should cover each bare conductor separately and completely. Yours does.



    You did not show the heatshrink. It should extend past the conductor at both ends and when shrunk should not be mechanically removable without destroying it.




  • The outer insulator should be robust enough to maintain overall insulation integrity for more than the desired lifetime of the connection.



    Yours sounds good. The outer tape MAY fray and unwind somewhat over time but the inner large heatshrink should render this unimportant.






The most significant improvement you could aim at is improving the joining of the two wires. What you have done is entirely acceptable - but, the bare wire outside the joint proper serves no great purpose. This can occur due to insulation pullback/shrinkage when soldering. This is minimised by learning to solder faster :-).



A way to minimise join length is to decide how many wraps each wire will make around the other 'target wire", decide how much target wire length is needed, and start winding one wire around the other at the desired length away from the target wire's insulation - ie usually quire close. When both wires have been wrapped onto their "target" wires there is no bare exposed wire between the join and insulation on either wire.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$



For a first attempt you have achieved an excellent result.

The result should be safe and reliable.
Cosmetically the result could be somewhat better but I have seen far far far worse in use and working long term.



The key points to consider are:





  • The output wires should connect to the same input wires as they did before the extension was made. Yours obviously do as the charger charges. However, this is an easy thing to get wrong and people sometimes do. The result may be as minor as "won't work" or as major as "charged device and/or charger destroyed".



    It pays to establish some way of determining which is the right and wrong way of connecting the wires. This is even more crucial when there are more than two wires.



    You obviously got it right :-).




  • The connections should be mechanically robust and not rely on the solder for strength.



    You got it right.




  • The solder joints should meet guidelines for good joints.

    Solder should flow and "wet" wire in both joined wires, be of correct appearance (smooth and shiny for lead 60-40 solder, less shiny for lead free solder) wires. Not too much and not too little solder.



    You did well enough.

    Your competence will improve with experience.




  • The insulation should cover each bare conductor separately and completely. Yours does.



    You did not show the heatshrink. It should extend past the conductor at both ends and when shrunk should not be mechanically removable without destroying it.




  • The outer insulator should be robust enough to maintain overall insulation integrity for more than the desired lifetime of the connection.



    Yours sounds good. The outer tape MAY fray and unwind somewhat over time but the inner large heatshrink should render this unimportant.






The most significant improvement you could aim at is improving the joining of the two wires. What you have done is entirely acceptable - but, the bare wire outside the joint proper serves no great purpose. This can occur due to insulation pullback/shrinkage when soldering. This is minimised by learning to solder faster :-).



A way to minimise join length is to decide how many wraps each wire will make around the other 'target wire", decide how much target wire length is needed, and start winding one wire around the other at the desired length away from the target wire's insulation - ie usually quire close. When both wires have been wrapped onto their "target" wires there is no bare exposed wire between the join and insulation on either wire.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









Russell McMahonRussell McMahon

118k9166298




118k9166298








  • 5




    $begingroup$
    The joint looks fine, but one issue not mentioned in this answer is that because the soldered joints are much stiffer than the rest of the power cord, if the cord is regularly bent or pulled the wires are likely to eventually snap at the end of the soldered section. If this likely to be a problem, you would be better using something like a simple in-line switch (e.g. ebay.co.uk/b/Inline-Cord-Switch-in-Home-Electrical-Fittings/… to join the wires.You could fix the switch permanently in the "on" position, of course.
    $endgroup$
    – alephzero
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    Great information! Just what I was looking for. In my case the original cord had a dashed line marking on one wire and the lamp cord had a rounded edge for one wire so I used those to keep track of the routing. I did overlap the heat shrink and it is very tight. I’ll try your advice next time. I had trouble twisting the wires all the way to the base because of the double wires and because I didn’t measure them exactly. Alephzero thanks for that point. It will be fixed to a wall.
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Great answer. One thing I would add is, whether or not a novice can do it depends on the wire used, because that can vary. The wire pictured here looks like a good gauge wire with good insulation, but some 5v charging cables are pretty low quality and nearly impossible to even prep for soldering.
    $endgroup$
    – dogoncouch
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    You can also provide strain relief for a stiff soldered connection by staggering the joints, a layer of heat shrink over each joint, a spring(plastic if voltage was significant) and a second layer of heat shrink over the lot. If you weren't using the electrical tape for color, I'd say put it under the heat shrink for a seamless look. The main problem with electrical tape is long term stability/unwrapping and this prevents that.
    $endgroup$
    – K H
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @KH wish I had thought of that. I have some clear heat shrink.
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    23 hours ago














  • 5




    $begingroup$
    The joint looks fine, but one issue not mentioned in this answer is that because the soldered joints are much stiffer than the rest of the power cord, if the cord is regularly bent or pulled the wires are likely to eventually snap at the end of the soldered section. If this likely to be a problem, you would be better using something like a simple in-line switch (e.g. ebay.co.uk/b/Inline-Cord-Switch-in-Home-Electrical-Fittings/… to join the wires.You could fix the switch permanently in the "on" position, of course.
    $endgroup$
    – alephzero
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    Great information! Just what I was looking for. In my case the original cord had a dashed line marking on one wire and the lamp cord had a rounded edge for one wire so I used those to keep track of the routing. I did overlap the heat shrink and it is very tight. I’ll try your advice next time. I had trouble twisting the wires all the way to the base because of the double wires and because I didn’t measure them exactly. Alephzero thanks for that point. It will be fixed to a wall.
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Great answer. One thing I would add is, whether or not a novice can do it depends on the wire used, because that can vary. The wire pictured here looks like a good gauge wire with good insulation, but some 5v charging cables are pretty low quality and nearly impossible to even prep for soldering.
    $endgroup$
    – dogoncouch
    yesterday






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    You can also provide strain relief for a stiff soldered connection by staggering the joints, a layer of heat shrink over each joint, a spring(plastic if voltage was significant) and a second layer of heat shrink over the lot. If you weren't using the electrical tape for color, I'd say put it under the heat shrink for a seamless look. The main problem with electrical tape is long term stability/unwrapping and this prevents that.
    $endgroup$
    – K H
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @KH wish I had thought of that. I have some clear heat shrink.
    $endgroup$
    – xr280xr
    23 hours ago








5




5




$begingroup$
The joint looks fine, but one issue not mentioned in this answer is that because the soldered joints are much stiffer than the rest of the power cord, if the cord is regularly bent or pulled the wires are likely to eventually snap at the end of the soldered section. If this likely to be a problem, you would be better using something like a simple in-line switch (e.g. ebay.co.uk/b/Inline-Cord-Switch-in-Home-Electrical-Fittings/… to join the wires.You could fix the switch permanently in the "on" position, of course.
$endgroup$
– alephzero
yesterday




$begingroup$
The joint looks fine, but one issue not mentioned in this answer is that because the soldered joints are much stiffer than the rest of the power cord, if the cord is regularly bent or pulled the wires are likely to eventually snap at the end of the soldered section. If this likely to be a problem, you would be better using something like a simple in-line switch (e.g. ebay.co.uk/b/Inline-Cord-Switch-in-Home-Electrical-Fittings/… to join the wires.You could fix the switch permanently in the "on" position, of course.
$endgroup$
– alephzero
yesterday












$begingroup$
Great information! Just what I was looking for. In my case the original cord had a dashed line marking on one wire and the lamp cord had a rounded edge for one wire so I used those to keep track of the routing. I did overlap the heat shrink and it is very tight. I’ll try your advice next time. I had trouble twisting the wires all the way to the base because of the double wires and because I didn’t measure them exactly. Alephzero thanks for that point. It will be fixed to a wall.
$endgroup$
– xr280xr
yesterday




$begingroup$
Great information! Just what I was looking for. In my case the original cord had a dashed line marking on one wire and the lamp cord had a rounded edge for one wire so I used those to keep track of the routing. I did overlap the heat shrink and it is very tight. I’ll try your advice next time. I had trouble twisting the wires all the way to the base because of the double wires and because I didn’t measure them exactly. Alephzero thanks for that point. It will be fixed to a wall.
$endgroup$
– xr280xr
yesterday




1




1




$begingroup$
Great answer. One thing I would add is, whether or not a novice can do it depends on the wire used, because that can vary. The wire pictured here looks like a good gauge wire with good insulation, but some 5v charging cables are pretty low quality and nearly impossible to even prep for soldering.
$endgroup$
– dogoncouch
yesterday




$begingroup$
Great answer. One thing I would add is, whether or not a novice can do it depends on the wire used, because that can vary. The wire pictured here looks like a good gauge wire with good insulation, but some 5v charging cables are pretty low quality and nearly impossible to even prep for soldering.
$endgroup$
– dogoncouch
yesterday




1




1




$begingroup$
You can also provide strain relief for a stiff soldered connection by staggering the joints, a layer of heat shrink over each joint, a spring(plastic if voltage was significant) and a second layer of heat shrink over the lot. If you weren't using the electrical tape for color, I'd say put it under the heat shrink for a seamless look. The main problem with electrical tape is long term stability/unwrapping and this prevents that.
$endgroup$
– K H
yesterday




$begingroup$
You can also provide strain relief for a stiff soldered connection by staggering the joints, a layer of heat shrink over each joint, a spring(plastic if voltage was significant) and a second layer of heat shrink over the lot. If you weren't using the electrical tape for color, I'd say put it under the heat shrink for a seamless look. The main problem with electrical tape is long term stability/unwrapping and this prevents that.
$endgroup$
– K H
yesterday












$begingroup$
@KH wish I had thought of that. I have some clear heat shrink.
$endgroup$
– xr280xr
23 hours ago




$begingroup$
@KH wish I had thought of that. I have some clear heat shrink.
$endgroup$
– xr280xr
23 hours ago










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