I use alot of of soldersleavves at work with good result. They are heatshrinks that has a soldderband inside. you heat them up as a regular heatshrink, and then kjeep jeating some more until the soldder metlts/wets. Really handy and makes for very good splices. Pare it up with a chemresistand glue-heatshrink and you a a very resilliand splice. Is does require a decent heatgun an get good repeteabillity though.
http://www.te.com/usa-en/products/harnessing/interconnect-devices/soldersleeve-shield-terminators.html?tab=pgp-story /Peter 2015-12-27 11:54 GMT+01:00 andy pugh <[email protected]>: > On 27 December 2015 at 06:55, Bruce Layne <[email protected]> > wrote: > > or you can > > epoxy coat the inside of the outer piece of heat shrink over soldered > > connections, and when you shrink it the epoxy oozes out the ends and > > makes a waterproof seal. > > Or you can buy heat-shrink with hot-melt glue pre-installed. A lot > more convenient and not that much more expensive. > > http://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/heat-shrink-cold-shrink-sleeves/4811797/ > > -- > atp > If you can't fix it, you don't own it. > http://www.ifixit.com/Manifesto > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > _______________________________________________ > Emc-users mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Emc-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users
