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  • headphone wring

    I' m attempting to replace jacks on several pairs of headphones, the stranded wire won't accept any of the various solders I have , which work fine for normal guitar projects etc.

    I have tried scuffing the strands ( as best as strands can be scuffed)

    Any ideas / experiences?

  • #2
    Normally the heat from the soldering iron / solder will burn the coating off. Get a fresh blob of solder on flat iron tip, and feed the end of the wire into it.
    Turn the soldering iron temperature up high, if it's adjustable.
    Or use a variac to boost the line voltage to the iron, to increase the temperature.
    My band:- http://www.youtube.com/user/RedwingBand

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    • #3
      yea that type wire is stubborn stuff. I plant the wire where it won't move, and just keep feeding solder on to the tip of the iron while I "bath" the wire in molten solder. It takes a little patience and some scrubbing, but it'll give eventually.

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      • #4
        Must confess to repairing a few earbuds and I found if I clean the wire (after
        rubbing it gently on emery paper) with isopropyl alcohol that seems to help.
        Sometimes it takes a few go's before I end up with a neat end !

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        • #5
          It's probably tinsel wire, which is made of copper foil wrapped round a core of nylon threads. The design is supposed to make it break resistant, but as a side effect it's a complete pain to solder.

          My plan was always to use the hottest soldering iron possible to burn up the nylon.
          "Enzo, I see that you replied parasitic oscillations. Is that a hypothesis? Or is that your amazing metal band I should check out?"

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