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Splice or replace
How can I hang a custom lamp from the ceiling by its cord?Finding one power wire to two lite switches. ugh!Splice inside light poleSub-panel with single ground and common bar - with a twistChinese Breaker Box (240v split-phase?) Lacks Neutral Wires and Grounding BusBig Problem: buried feed to outbuilding sub-panel. Not really buriedSafest way of temporarily working with a failed 4-wire outbuilding subpanel (one missing hot leg, neutral bonded ground on both ends)?Condenser motor spliceHelp with untangling an ancient wiring messKenmore Elite Refrigerator Door Pinched / Broken Wires
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
Accidentally cut power cord while pruning shrub and needed to repair by splicing wires together without making contact or needing to repair again. Asked associate at local hardware store and he suggested I buy a new cord (of course).
What is best way to repair a 3wire extension cord?
electrical repair
New contributor
add a comment
|
Accidentally cut power cord while pruning shrub and needed to repair by splicing wires together without making contact or needing to repair again. Asked associate at local hardware store and he suggested I buy a new cord (of course).
What is best way to repair a 3wire extension cord?
electrical repair
New contributor
Bought a cordless hedger...no more cut cord.
– bwcoholan
11 hours ago
2
Put the appropriate ends on and Now you can have two extension cords. ;)
– Alaska Man
10 hours ago
add a comment
|
Accidentally cut power cord while pruning shrub and needed to repair by splicing wires together without making contact or needing to repair again. Asked associate at local hardware store and he suggested I buy a new cord (of course).
What is best way to repair a 3wire extension cord?
electrical repair
New contributor
Accidentally cut power cord while pruning shrub and needed to repair by splicing wires together without making contact or needing to repair again. Asked associate at local hardware store and he suggested I buy a new cord (of course).
What is best way to repair a 3wire extension cord?
electrical repair
electrical repair
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 11 hours ago
bwcoholanbwcoholan
111 bronze badge
111 bronze badge
New contributor
New contributor
Bought a cordless hedger...no more cut cord.
– bwcoholan
11 hours ago
2
Put the appropriate ends on and Now you can have two extension cords. ;)
– Alaska Man
10 hours ago
add a comment
|
Bought a cordless hedger...no more cut cord.
– bwcoholan
11 hours ago
2
Put the appropriate ends on and Now you can have two extension cords. ;)
– Alaska Man
10 hours ago
Bought a cordless hedger...no more cut cord.
– bwcoholan
11 hours ago
Bought a cordless hedger...no more cut cord.
– bwcoholan
11 hours ago
2
2
Put the appropriate ends on and Now you can have two extension cords. ;)
– Alaska Man
10 hours ago
Put the appropriate ends on and Now you can have two extension cords. ;)
– Alaska Man
10 hours ago
add a comment
|
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Alaska Man was being funny, but that really is the best course of action. Any splice you put in the cord will not be as strong as the rest of the cord and may snag on things and come loose depending on how you do it. It's just not a good option.
If you cut near the middle, buy a male and female 3-prong plug end and make two extension cords out of it. If it's close to one end, throw the short end away and buy the appropriate plug to fix the long section.
If it's a light-duty cord, price then ends then price a new cord. I'll bet those two prices are close (if buying two replacement plugs), so you can then decide if its really worth it to mess with.
2
I think Alaska Man was being serious.. I've done that many times, especially with the more expensive cords.
– JACK
10 hours ago
2
@JACK, He's never too serious, but he is right a lot.
– JPhi1618
10 hours ago
add a comment
|
Here's what you do. Go to a big box with a good electrical department and look for RayChem or SolderSleeve butt splices, and some heavy duty heat shrink. I mean really heavy duty, not the stuff that sort of looks like in flattened tubes in the package. If it doesn't look like small black pipe you're looking at the wrong kind. Pick one that will fit over your cord and make sure it has pieces 4-6 inches long.
- Slide on the hard heat shrink. Use a nice, long piece, mayybe 4
inches. - The splices have you slide on a heat shrink tube before connecting
the conductors. RayChems use a crimp barrel to connect the ends.
The SolderSleeves require you to twist the ends together. - Connect each conductor (whether twist or crimp), then slide the
splice's individual heat shrink over the connect and apply heat. The
SolderSleeve splices will melt solder into the joint and also melt
some plastic sealant at each of its ends to environmentally seal the
spliced connection. The Raychem works almost the same except it uses
the crimp barrel instead of solder to join the conductors. It also
has a heat activated environmental seal. - When you have all three conductors spliced, slide the big piece of
hard heat shrink down over all three conductors ahd use the heat gun
on it. That leaves a splice that's well protected from stress and
moisture.
NOTE: carefully read the instructions before you begin to prepare the ends. The total length of the exposed conductors and their insulation should be something that the hard heat shrink tube will cover with an extra inche on either side. For example, if the exposed conductor insulation and their splices is two inches long, you should have at least four inches of hard heat shrink. You want that extra length there to provide a bit of stress relief for the cord so that jerking it around in-use won't strain the spliced connections.
I've found one or another of these splices at Lowes and Home Depot. The last time I found the hard heat shrink at Home Depot. Lowes probably has it, but I haven't looked there. Most big box home centers carry the spices and heat shrink.
If you don't see the brands I mentioned, take a close look at the splices they do have and you might see one with the same characteristics. The standard crimp splice kits (the automotive kind) are not something you'd want to use except breiefly in an emergency.
3
Our Home Depot has a great electrical department. It's about 2 miles away and the sign says City Electric. Lowes also has a great electrical department, it's in a nearby industrial park and is called Greybar. Menards has one across the street marked Platt Electric...
– Harper
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
I have done this several times. I have several spliced cords in my collection. Splicing is no big deal. I'm sure Youtube or Instructables will have detailed pics or vids of doing it.
That said: One option with cutting tool is to wire a plug a short distance from the tool -- a foot to 18 inches. Now you can use whatever extension cord you have, using whatever length is appropriate. I like leaving enough of a tail on the tool that I can tie a knot with the extension cord to keep it from casually separating.
add a comment
|
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Alaska Man was being funny, but that really is the best course of action. Any splice you put in the cord will not be as strong as the rest of the cord and may snag on things and come loose depending on how you do it. It's just not a good option.
If you cut near the middle, buy a male and female 3-prong plug end and make two extension cords out of it. If it's close to one end, throw the short end away and buy the appropriate plug to fix the long section.
If it's a light-duty cord, price then ends then price a new cord. I'll bet those two prices are close (if buying two replacement plugs), so you can then decide if its really worth it to mess with.
2
I think Alaska Man was being serious.. I've done that many times, especially with the more expensive cords.
– JACK
10 hours ago
2
@JACK, He's never too serious, but he is right a lot.
– JPhi1618
10 hours ago
add a comment
|
Alaska Man was being funny, but that really is the best course of action. Any splice you put in the cord will not be as strong as the rest of the cord and may snag on things and come loose depending on how you do it. It's just not a good option.
If you cut near the middle, buy a male and female 3-prong plug end and make two extension cords out of it. If it's close to one end, throw the short end away and buy the appropriate plug to fix the long section.
If it's a light-duty cord, price then ends then price a new cord. I'll bet those two prices are close (if buying two replacement plugs), so you can then decide if its really worth it to mess with.
2
I think Alaska Man was being serious.. I've done that many times, especially with the more expensive cords.
– JACK
10 hours ago
2
@JACK, He's never too serious, but he is right a lot.
– JPhi1618
10 hours ago
add a comment
|
Alaska Man was being funny, but that really is the best course of action. Any splice you put in the cord will not be as strong as the rest of the cord and may snag on things and come loose depending on how you do it. It's just not a good option.
If you cut near the middle, buy a male and female 3-prong plug end and make two extension cords out of it. If it's close to one end, throw the short end away and buy the appropriate plug to fix the long section.
If it's a light-duty cord, price then ends then price a new cord. I'll bet those two prices are close (if buying two replacement plugs), so you can then decide if its really worth it to mess with.
Alaska Man was being funny, but that really is the best course of action. Any splice you put in the cord will not be as strong as the rest of the cord and may snag on things and come loose depending on how you do it. It's just not a good option.
If you cut near the middle, buy a male and female 3-prong plug end and make two extension cords out of it. If it's close to one end, throw the short end away and buy the appropriate plug to fix the long section.
If it's a light-duty cord, price then ends then price a new cord. I'll bet those two prices are close (if buying two replacement plugs), so you can then decide if its really worth it to mess with.
answered 10 hours ago
JPhi1618JPhi1618
13.8k2 gold badges26 silver badges49 bronze badges
13.8k2 gold badges26 silver badges49 bronze badges
2
I think Alaska Man was being serious.. I've done that many times, especially with the more expensive cords.
– JACK
10 hours ago
2
@JACK, He's never too serious, but he is right a lot.
– JPhi1618
10 hours ago
add a comment
|
2
I think Alaska Man was being serious.. I've done that many times, especially with the more expensive cords.
– JACK
10 hours ago
2
@JACK, He's never too serious, but he is right a lot.
– JPhi1618
10 hours ago
2
2
I think Alaska Man was being serious.. I've done that many times, especially with the more expensive cords.
– JACK
10 hours ago
I think Alaska Man was being serious.. I've done that many times, especially with the more expensive cords.
– JACK
10 hours ago
2
2
@JACK, He's never too serious, but he is right a lot.
– JPhi1618
10 hours ago
@JACK, He's never too serious, but he is right a lot.
– JPhi1618
10 hours ago
add a comment
|
Here's what you do. Go to a big box with a good electrical department and look for RayChem or SolderSleeve butt splices, and some heavy duty heat shrink. I mean really heavy duty, not the stuff that sort of looks like in flattened tubes in the package. If it doesn't look like small black pipe you're looking at the wrong kind. Pick one that will fit over your cord and make sure it has pieces 4-6 inches long.
- Slide on the hard heat shrink. Use a nice, long piece, mayybe 4
inches. - The splices have you slide on a heat shrink tube before connecting
the conductors. RayChems use a crimp barrel to connect the ends.
The SolderSleeves require you to twist the ends together. - Connect each conductor (whether twist or crimp), then slide the
splice's individual heat shrink over the connect and apply heat. The
SolderSleeve splices will melt solder into the joint and also melt
some plastic sealant at each of its ends to environmentally seal the
spliced connection. The Raychem works almost the same except it uses
the crimp barrel instead of solder to join the conductors. It also
has a heat activated environmental seal. - When you have all three conductors spliced, slide the big piece of
hard heat shrink down over all three conductors ahd use the heat gun
on it. That leaves a splice that's well protected from stress and
moisture.
NOTE: carefully read the instructions before you begin to prepare the ends. The total length of the exposed conductors and their insulation should be something that the hard heat shrink tube will cover with an extra inche on either side. For example, if the exposed conductor insulation and their splices is two inches long, you should have at least four inches of hard heat shrink. You want that extra length there to provide a bit of stress relief for the cord so that jerking it around in-use won't strain the spliced connections.
I've found one or another of these splices at Lowes and Home Depot. The last time I found the hard heat shrink at Home Depot. Lowes probably has it, but I haven't looked there. Most big box home centers carry the spices and heat shrink.
If you don't see the brands I mentioned, take a close look at the splices they do have and you might see one with the same characteristics. The standard crimp splice kits (the automotive kind) are not something you'd want to use except breiefly in an emergency.
3
Our Home Depot has a great electrical department. It's about 2 miles away and the sign says City Electric. Lowes also has a great electrical department, it's in a nearby industrial park and is called Greybar. Menards has one across the street marked Platt Electric...
– Harper
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
Here's what you do. Go to a big box with a good electrical department and look for RayChem or SolderSleeve butt splices, and some heavy duty heat shrink. I mean really heavy duty, not the stuff that sort of looks like in flattened tubes in the package. If it doesn't look like small black pipe you're looking at the wrong kind. Pick one that will fit over your cord and make sure it has pieces 4-6 inches long.
- Slide on the hard heat shrink. Use a nice, long piece, mayybe 4
inches. - The splices have you slide on a heat shrink tube before connecting
the conductors. RayChems use a crimp barrel to connect the ends.
The SolderSleeves require you to twist the ends together. - Connect each conductor (whether twist or crimp), then slide the
splice's individual heat shrink over the connect and apply heat. The
SolderSleeve splices will melt solder into the joint and also melt
some plastic sealant at each of its ends to environmentally seal the
spliced connection. The Raychem works almost the same except it uses
the crimp barrel instead of solder to join the conductors. It also
has a heat activated environmental seal. - When you have all three conductors spliced, slide the big piece of
hard heat shrink down over all three conductors ahd use the heat gun
on it. That leaves a splice that's well protected from stress and
moisture.
NOTE: carefully read the instructions before you begin to prepare the ends. The total length of the exposed conductors and their insulation should be something that the hard heat shrink tube will cover with an extra inche on either side. For example, if the exposed conductor insulation and their splices is two inches long, you should have at least four inches of hard heat shrink. You want that extra length there to provide a bit of stress relief for the cord so that jerking it around in-use won't strain the spliced connections.
I've found one or another of these splices at Lowes and Home Depot. The last time I found the hard heat shrink at Home Depot. Lowes probably has it, but I haven't looked there. Most big box home centers carry the spices and heat shrink.
If you don't see the brands I mentioned, take a close look at the splices they do have and you might see one with the same characteristics. The standard crimp splice kits (the automotive kind) are not something you'd want to use except breiefly in an emergency.
3
Our Home Depot has a great electrical department. It's about 2 miles away and the sign says City Electric. Lowes also has a great electrical department, it's in a nearby industrial park and is called Greybar. Menards has one across the street marked Platt Electric...
– Harper
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
Here's what you do. Go to a big box with a good electrical department and look for RayChem or SolderSleeve butt splices, and some heavy duty heat shrink. I mean really heavy duty, not the stuff that sort of looks like in flattened tubes in the package. If it doesn't look like small black pipe you're looking at the wrong kind. Pick one that will fit over your cord and make sure it has pieces 4-6 inches long.
- Slide on the hard heat shrink. Use a nice, long piece, mayybe 4
inches. - The splices have you slide on a heat shrink tube before connecting
the conductors. RayChems use a crimp barrel to connect the ends.
The SolderSleeves require you to twist the ends together. - Connect each conductor (whether twist or crimp), then slide the
splice's individual heat shrink over the connect and apply heat. The
SolderSleeve splices will melt solder into the joint and also melt
some plastic sealant at each of its ends to environmentally seal the
spliced connection. The Raychem works almost the same except it uses
the crimp barrel instead of solder to join the conductors. It also
has a heat activated environmental seal. - When you have all three conductors spliced, slide the big piece of
hard heat shrink down over all three conductors ahd use the heat gun
on it. That leaves a splice that's well protected from stress and
moisture.
NOTE: carefully read the instructions before you begin to prepare the ends. The total length of the exposed conductors and their insulation should be something that the hard heat shrink tube will cover with an extra inche on either side. For example, if the exposed conductor insulation and their splices is two inches long, you should have at least four inches of hard heat shrink. You want that extra length there to provide a bit of stress relief for the cord so that jerking it around in-use won't strain the spliced connections.
I've found one or another of these splices at Lowes and Home Depot. The last time I found the hard heat shrink at Home Depot. Lowes probably has it, but I haven't looked there. Most big box home centers carry the spices and heat shrink.
If you don't see the brands I mentioned, take a close look at the splices they do have and you might see one with the same characteristics. The standard crimp splice kits (the automotive kind) are not something you'd want to use except breiefly in an emergency.
Here's what you do. Go to a big box with a good electrical department and look for RayChem or SolderSleeve butt splices, and some heavy duty heat shrink. I mean really heavy duty, not the stuff that sort of looks like in flattened tubes in the package. If it doesn't look like small black pipe you're looking at the wrong kind. Pick one that will fit over your cord and make sure it has pieces 4-6 inches long.
- Slide on the hard heat shrink. Use a nice, long piece, mayybe 4
inches. - The splices have you slide on a heat shrink tube before connecting
the conductors. RayChems use a crimp barrel to connect the ends.
The SolderSleeves require you to twist the ends together. - Connect each conductor (whether twist or crimp), then slide the
splice's individual heat shrink over the connect and apply heat. The
SolderSleeve splices will melt solder into the joint and also melt
some plastic sealant at each of its ends to environmentally seal the
spliced connection. The Raychem works almost the same except it uses
the crimp barrel instead of solder to join the conductors. It also
has a heat activated environmental seal. - When you have all three conductors spliced, slide the big piece of
hard heat shrink down over all three conductors ahd use the heat gun
on it. That leaves a splice that's well protected from stress and
moisture.
NOTE: carefully read the instructions before you begin to prepare the ends. The total length of the exposed conductors and their insulation should be something that the hard heat shrink tube will cover with an extra inche on either side. For example, if the exposed conductor insulation and their splices is two inches long, you should have at least four inches of hard heat shrink. You want that extra length there to provide a bit of stress relief for the cord so that jerking it around in-use won't strain the spliced connections.
I've found one or another of these splices at Lowes and Home Depot. The last time I found the hard heat shrink at Home Depot. Lowes probably has it, but I haven't looked there. Most big box home centers carry the spices and heat shrink.
If you don't see the brands I mentioned, take a close look at the splices they do have and you might see one with the same characteristics. The standard crimp splice kits (the automotive kind) are not something you'd want to use except breiefly in an emergency.
answered 10 hours ago
RingRing
1213 bronze badges
1213 bronze badges
3
Our Home Depot has a great electrical department. It's about 2 miles away and the sign says City Electric. Lowes also has a great electrical department, it's in a nearby industrial park and is called Greybar. Menards has one across the street marked Platt Electric...
– Harper
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
3
Our Home Depot has a great electrical department. It's about 2 miles away and the sign says City Electric. Lowes also has a great electrical department, it's in a nearby industrial park and is called Greybar. Menards has one across the street marked Platt Electric...
– Harper
8 hours ago
3
3
Our Home Depot has a great electrical department. It's about 2 miles away and the sign says City Electric. Lowes also has a great electrical department, it's in a nearby industrial park and is called Greybar. Menards has one across the street marked Platt Electric...
– Harper
8 hours ago
Our Home Depot has a great electrical department. It's about 2 miles away and the sign says City Electric. Lowes also has a great electrical department, it's in a nearby industrial park and is called Greybar. Menards has one across the street marked Platt Electric...
– Harper
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
I have done this several times. I have several spliced cords in my collection. Splicing is no big deal. I'm sure Youtube or Instructables will have detailed pics or vids of doing it.
That said: One option with cutting tool is to wire a plug a short distance from the tool -- a foot to 18 inches. Now you can use whatever extension cord you have, using whatever length is appropriate. I like leaving enough of a tail on the tool that I can tie a knot with the extension cord to keep it from casually separating.
add a comment
|
I have done this several times. I have several spliced cords in my collection. Splicing is no big deal. I'm sure Youtube or Instructables will have detailed pics or vids of doing it.
That said: One option with cutting tool is to wire a plug a short distance from the tool -- a foot to 18 inches. Now you can use whatever extension cord you have, using whatever length is appropriate. I like leaving enough of a tail on the tool that I can tie a knot with the extension cord to keep it from casually separating.
add a comment
|
I have done this several times. I have several spliced cords in my collection. Splicing is no big deal. I'm sure Youtube or Instructables will have detailed pics or vids of doing it.
That said: One option with cutting tool is to wire a plug a short distance from the tool -- a foot to 18 inches. Now you can use whatever extension cord you have, using whatever length is appropriate. I like leaving enough of a tail on the tool that I can tie a knot with the extension cord to keep it from casually separating.
I have done this several times. I have several spliced cords in my collection. Splicing is no big deal. I'm sure Youtube or Instructables will have detailed pics or vids of doing it.
That said: One option with cutting tool is to wire a plug a short distance from the tool -- a foot to 18 inches. Now you can use whatever extension cord you have, using whatever length is appropriate. I like leaving enough of a tail on the tool that I can tie a knot with the extension cord to keep it from casually separating.
answered 10 hours ago
Sherwood BotsfordSherwood Botsford
1,2727 silver badges23 bronze badges
1,2727 silver badges23 bronze badges
add a comment
|
add a comment
|
bwcoholan is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
bwcoholan is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
bwcoholan is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Bought a cordless hedger...no more cut cord.
– bwcoholan
11 hours ago
2
Put the appropriate ends on and Now you can have two extension cords. ;)
– Alaska Man
10 hours ago