Widget for joining 3-core mains flex

If the flex goes round a indoor doorpost and I pull the flex then I am not putting much strain on it at all.

I will have to live in sin then! :-)

The cable on my fan heater is about 4 to 5 foot and is too short to be used whre I want it to be.

I want it to extend it to about 10 foot.

Reply to
Coleman
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It is the best but sometimes it is too long a job to open up the appliance and to attach the new flex cores because of the way user- unfriendly way in which the appliance has been designed.

Reply to
Coleman

ISTR there was a time when the different twists had their own names. Maybe they still do.

Wasn't something like "Western Roll" one such name???

Reply to
Coleman

Hey, are you related to the Coleman company? :) I just bought a 21 volt cordless drill from Coleman.?

P.S. Can some one tell me what a flex is?

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Reply to
Jamie

Coleman is an old AMERICAN company that made gasoline lanterns and camping gear. Good luck with that drill. I was given several new 18 and

19.2 volt Coleman Powermate drills, along with eight batteries. The piece of crap doesn't have enough torque to do much, and one snapped the steel shank that connects the chuck to the gearbox. The other was shipped without a wire from the PWM board, to one side of the trigger. I fixed it, and made one complete set out of the pile of parts. I couldn't even give it away. A $9 drill from Harbor Freight works a WHOLE lot better.

Are you really that dense? It is a British term for flexible line cords. It has been discussed countless times on the electronics and electrical engineering newsgroups.

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Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida
Reply to
Michael A. Terrell

well, I'm not British and I have never heard of the term "FLEX".. Here we have different names, maybe not the correct name but different never the less.

SJO, Rubber cord, zip cord, curly cord and yes FLexible cord I can comprehend, but when using the terms "FLEX" with out cord or what ever afterwards kind of throws me. For all I know you could have been talking about "GreenField", BX, BC, Seal Tight, what ever....

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Reply to
Jamie

Cabtyre.

Reply to
Homer J Simpson

Then a regular extension cord will work fine.

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Reply to
Homer J Simpson

I did write "normal" - which you too seem to think is inadequate, as you use adhesive heatshrink.

Whether it will go on the drum neatly depends on the size of the cable and the drum.

I've used similar techniques to the one you mention where cable replacement was impractical, eg re-joining the command and power cable of a tethered submersible. That has been good enough to survive a few weeks of fairly deep salt water immersion, etc. But the repair only ever lasted a few weeks, no matter how carefully it was done. The cable alarm would inevitably sound and the fault was inevitably at the join.. So no way was it as good as the original cable, unjoined.

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Sue
Reply to
Palindrome

I don't know if the safety break was a regulatory requirement, although it was pretty universal. Does your Bosch have active breaking (stops dead when you release the handle)? I guess that would do the same thing, although the active breaking on two lawnmowers I have both stopped working after a couple of years, and now the blades just spin down under their own momentum when the trigger is released.

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Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]
Reply to
Andrew Gabriel

Yes it will but it s clumsy and inconvenient to get out each time!

Reply to
Coleman

I have been doing it for years too (without the heatshrink).

I am genuinely quite surprised that there are so many posts worrying quite deeply about safety.

Of course what I want to do is less good than having a single piece of flex. But this is not exactly HIGH risk in the circumstances I want to use it the appliances in.

Reply to
Coleman

That would be active braking.

break =/= brake

Graham

Reply to
Eeyore

Judging from his words, in Andrew's case it does appear that the brake had been actively breaking...

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Sue
Reply to
Palindrome

Then stop bodging things and install a proper, permanent socket where it is needed.

Owain

Reply to
Owain

On Sat, 02 Jun 2007 20:21:07 +0100, Coleman mused:

Make the join at the end near to the appliance so it's not dragged around corners all the time.

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Regards,
Stuart.
Reply to
Lurch

You are a d*****ad. What part of "I'm sorry sir. Due to your haphazard electrical 'repairs' your insurance does not cover the total loss of your home" did you fail to understand?

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Reply to
Homer J Simpson

Can you give some examples of this in the UK? It would be very difficult to prove in a court of law.

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    Dave Plowman        dave@davenoise.co.uk           London SW
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Reply to
Dave Plowman (News)

Yes.

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Reply to
Huge

Not sure that's relevant -- I've never seen a [UK] policy which excludes this anyway. Actually, policies often explicitly include cover for DIY accidents.

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Andrew Gabriel
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Reply to
Andrew Gabriel

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