This is the way I teach recovery technology in middle school. And I will take the time to make the electrical wires in the house as sturdy and safe as possible when the wires are bitten by something. This is how to protect yourself and your family members
@@tuttiflooti Because this is creating a hotspot on the wire. Much more than a few amperes and you will heat the 'connection' severely. Why do you think the electric board has guidelines for how to extend wires carrying household currents (up to 10-15 amps per wire.)
The fact that all the top comments are completely wrong and have 500+ likes is infuriating. - No, from an electrical point of view this is not a spiral/solenoid. There is the same magnetic field produced as any cable. It is not insulated wire, and therefore the electrons do not have to go around the spiral, they just move straight through copper. - No, this wire will not overheat. The larger the cable, the less the resistance, the less the heating. Super simple stuff.
Bro he left the inner wire strands loose and barely touching each other.That s bound to overheat.I feel he should solder the connection just to be sure at least
Thought a larger cable creates more resistance not less. In any case it don’t matter, don’t do this just use a splice this is kinda fuckin ridiculous in the first place.
@@kazedcat I don't know what's vibrating in your building's electrical system? Maybe in California, something like 3 times a year. It doesn't have to be a straight connection, 2 hooks facing each other and then you solder them, instead of making a coiled "generator" there. And of course you insulate it with tape.🤔
Well im here you shouldnt do this because it is a waste of wire and super inefficient just unroll your wire take each strand and twist it to the other wire (By the way im just a student engineer)
As for me, it is easier to solder the wires, rather than waste time, nerves and the length of the wire, besides, after soldering the wires hold tightly
Если провод в стенке (скрытый монтаж) то опять нельзя. У прибоя низкая температура плавления тт 170 до 270. И есть большой шанс что провод разогреется, прибой расплавится и капает вниз, что приведёт к пожару.
The wires are small gauge automotive wiring. This means a simple splice like shown is good enough. Soldiers are not good enough because they crack with high vibration. They could have used proper connectors but for low voltage and low current application using a splice is good enough.
My electrical engineering background includes owning a book on inductor design. I don't think what is shown in the video would increase inductance any more than negligibly over an intact straight piece of insulated braided wire.
But this is just a wikihow of a makeshift, it was not made to be the work of a professional electrician, a lot of work soldering and other complicated things
The thicker the cable the less heat, thus why thicker cables can carry higher amps, but in this case the current would be suited to the cable not the join, meaning it won't overheat, but it's not a correct procedure for us electricians, just a simple tunnel connecter will be sufficient 👍
Over 300 people actually agreed with this?!?!? -------------------------------------------------- [Note: This comment is not focused on any particular "designated group" with regard to the TH-cam "hate speech" or "cyberbullying" policies. It simply reflects the author's opinion regarding a subject, which may or may not also pertain to an individual's actions demonstrated in the video. If any such individuals belong to any of the "designated groups", any commentary included is merely incidental to that grouping and such groups are not the focus of any comments. It's pathetic that this comment is necessary for the YouTube censors who are too stupid to figure it out otherwise.]
I asked ChatGPT and this is what it said "The setup in your images appears to be a sturdy wire-joining technique, likely for electrical conductivity and durability. If used in an electrical circuit carrying current, the coiling could create a localized magnetic field. However, this would typically be negligible for most practical purposes unless designed for electromagnetic applications."
@ I have a personal problem with them. One on my bike got messed up and left me stranded soldering means the wire fails before the connection (if you’re not completely useless) but connecting tubes are a good idea for your saddle bags
No. Heating coils have high resistance to convert electrical energy to heat. Also if you are talking about induction heating, they have insulator around the wire.
I’m not an electrician and thus don’t quite understand the concerns brought up in the comments. My understanding is any time current flows thru a wire it creates a magnet and connection will get hotter if it’s not very good. Is the shrink tube not good insulation? Also, I learned the hard way you put the shrink tube on before you connect the wires.
Ну поздравляю вы сделали катушку тесла, теперь металическая пыль которая возможно будет в месте соединения, например это лампочка в мастерской где частенько работают с металлом, будет собираться на кабеле и намагничиваться. А ещё ты потратил на это минуты 4, а если тебе нужно 500 соединений таких сделать. Лучше по номальному взять обыкновенную медную втулку и обжать, а потом термоусадкой, если нет такой обжимки бери паяльником, если нет паяльника купи специльные штуки для соединения проводов, если и их нет, то обыкновенное соединение с термоусадкой или слоемизоленты исправит это дело.
Что за бред , катушка электромагнитная индукция появляется в замкнутом магнитном поле , тип на видео сделал просто огромную скрутку , но провода не замкнуты которые он заворачивал , ты вообще знаешь сколько в катушке витков чтобы получить из нее хотя бы простенький магнит , я на работе делал катушку 2200 витков , и то на маленькую мощность , так что не пиши чепуху
Ok, the second one, just get a wire nut and cap it off, brother. Most of what you're showing could lead to long term damage or even start a fire. (Yes, I'm an electrician, there are codes to follow for a reason)
I understand this is done when you are using a cable that you know will be pulling some force from time to time, and you don't want it disconnecting in one of those times. So you do it this way so it stays held tight for the soft pulls. An electrician told me this. Otherwise yeah you don't truly need to do it this way since it just wasted time and wire.
while this will work to make it secure, it is very wasteful , prone to overheat, and might cause magnetic interference, which could be a big problem in places like a hospital, or other places with high precision electronics.
This is a correct and secure way to connect cord ends. You should try to use less exposed wire though 0,5 to 1 cm are more than enough. This also only works with multi-wire cords, if you have a single-wire cord you will require clamps. The shrink tube is also a bit large, I would have taken a smaller size to ensure a tighter fit. But those are just my two cents.
He definitely missed his physics class. If he had attended it, he would know that doing this causes a lot of wastage of electric current due to high resistance. A joint should be kept as minimal as possible.
Bro, is there any way to measure the current capacity differences in a continuous wire and a joint of this kind or other joints? Also, would a joint made by melting the copper flow into each other at the joint, making it a somewhat continuous connection, be as good as an actual continuous wire? Is there any particular way to get almost no degradation in current capacity with wire joints?
Well please go call Toyota, Honda, nissan, audi. BMW, Volvo, keyworth and ford.... cause this is how there engineers want it done. It's pretty much an industry standard way
personally, I'd just throw in a crimp connection, but if you dont have anything but heat shrink and want a really strong connection i giess this works 😂 just alot of effort
If your doing this instead of going to the store to get some, you have too much patience. This also looks like it would cost more than just getting some wire nuts.
Technically yes, but soldering requires a proper station where wires don't move, plus soldering produces fumes, plus we have to hear up the iron, it is a lot of work, and it makes the wire brittle, so either your soldering iron is strong enough to melt the copper, then yes, still not that much because it would make it brittle, then no if you are using solder
@@Rotorhead1651 it is pretty common physics, people twist wires so that when they bend they have equal stress on inside and outside, plus we use things like cooper and stretch them till they are like few mm thick, by adding solder, you practically take that ability away, that is why we only use soldering on... circuit boards and small electronics and not big voltage mama wires
My work time :- 10sec
Your work time:- 10min
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉😅😅😢😢😂😂❤😮😮😊😊
Qualidade vale mais que tempo
Your endurance 1 hour
My endurance 1 year
@@dianahoffmann2976lol yea unfortunately contractors don’t see it that way
This is the way I teach recovery technology in middle school. And I will take the time to make the electrical wires in the house as sturdy and safe as possible when the wires are bitten by something. This is how to protect yourself and your family members
How to make wire longer ❌
How to waste wire ✅
How to create a magnet ✅
😂😂😂 chas aaa gai jani 😂😂😂😂
Create a magnetic 😂😂😂 you're crazy
笑死 真的有夠鬧
這樣電線溫度不升高算我輸😂
No, how to easy work in a more complicated manner
You missed how to start a house fire
"So what year did his house burn down?"
About 2 years ago his- wait how did you know his house burned down😮
@@tuttiflooti Because this is creating a hotspot on the wire. Much more than a few amperes and you will heat the 'connection' severely. Why do you think the electric board has guidelines for how to extend wires carrying household currents (up to 10-15 amps per wire.)
2025 I am from the future
@@JanSevelsted no it’s because… ah never mind
하하하❤❤
The fact that all the top comments are completely wrong and have 500+ likes is infuriating.
- No, from an electrical point of view this is not a spiral/solenoid. There is the same magnetic field produced as any cable. It is not insulated wire, and therefore the electrons do not have to go around the spiral, they just move straight through copper.
- No, this wire will not overheat. The larger the cable, the less the resistance, the less the heating.
Super simple stuff.
Just proves that dumb comments get the most attention. You are 100% correct.
Bro he left the inner wire strands loose and barely touching each other.That s bound to overheat.I feel he should solder the connection just to be sure at least
@@adamosmichaelides8213 "bound to"
I like how you don't sound sure about your theory.
@@Shockguey of course I m not 100% .That s what it looks like to me at least
Thought a larger cable creates more resistance not less.
In any case it don’t matter, don’t do this just use a splice this is kinda fuckin ridiculous in the first place.
"Sir, your health is terrible, do you live in Chernobyl?"
"Nah, I just have a strong electromagnet in my house for no reason."
The radiation can be lower than radio waves, so it prob won't do shit, it's not like it's a MRI or sm
Weird, people think if we make a coil out of straight bare copper wire , it would make an inductor and more magnetic field , which is completely false
@@manjulwalia1995 its true? Go watch a styropyro video about the car batteries
Magnetism! Ahhhhhhhhh!
bro underrated comment smashed my phone on the floor smasher my head on wall, got me rolling on floor of laughing best comment in the world.
The amount of magnetic field generated by those wires 💀
Nothing special magnetic going on here. Just a good join thats a bit over the top.
It's a freaking magnetic coil lmao
it's not. the wires in a magnetic coil are insulated. the wires in the video are not and are just acting as one big wire
Oh bull.
you know nothing about this stuff
"How to Create a Problem for a Solution".
Someone may not know the history of 19th century wiring to present.
Nah I aint doing all that, I don't have that kinda patience😂
Chúng ta cần đơn giản hơn 😂
@@ngocsonspeaker2002 speak English bro
@@EthanSolomons4evahe said "we need something simpler"😆😆
You will do once you have an electrical fire or you get zapped
😅😅😅
Soldering iron and solder? It's a wonderful invention of mankind.
Solders crack. For a dangling line expose to vibration and wind a linesman splice is a more solid connection than a solder.
@@kazedcat I don't know what's vibrating in your building's electrical system? Maybe in California, something like 3 times a year. It doesn't have to be a straight connection, 2 hooks facing each other and then you solder them, instead of making a coiled "generator" there. And of course you insulate it with tape.🤔
@martinhejtmanek2358 The wires shown are automotive wires
Actually for high current applications you don't want solder because it can melt if the wires heat up. For those you would use crimps and screws.
@@kazedcat for automotives wires u just bought one new, its not 20 m cable in the wall... 🤔
Literally any connector?
Solder?
I'm waiting for a electrician to tell me why i shouldnt do it this way 😅😅😅
Well im here you shouldnt do this because it is a waste of wire and super inefficient just unroll your wire take each strand and twist it to the other wire
(By the way im just a student engineer)
An electrician... 😂😂
@COUMPUTERGAMER Ima be doing an electrician course next year too friend 💪
In the real world you use wago conectors, you don't have time to mess about with this. Looks pretty though.
Mechaniclly it looks pretty good, waste of wire and time consuming. Depending on the application, it might be ok.
Looks great. Nobody is ever going to do that though.
Also very dangerous
Я линейщик. Я так делаю каждый день по несколько раз
For safety it should
@@nord_playeryou make magnets every day?
@@Swan_River_Cowboy No. I'm building power lines.
リングスリーブと圧着ペンチと絶縁キャップという物が安くでホームセンターにあるんだよ
火災の原因になるから電気は適当に扱わない方がいい
設備屋やってた10代の頃
配線なんて適当に繋げてビニルテープで適当にグルグル
適当に扱ってたよ。絶縁巻いときゃok
ビニールテープまいとけば適当に扱っても漏れません
正論。
@@Usikum それが原因で浴室乾燥機や換気扇の故障が相次いだため、現在圧着していないとメーカー保証が受けられません。
あなたたちのせいです。
@@hide-xp4uy
原因はビニールテープを巻いていたというところではなくジョイント面がきちんとしていなかったところでしょう?
ちなみに、配線のジョイントがどうのこうの書いてるけど資格持ってるの?
簡単だから勝手にやりゃええと思うけどさ、ようわからん知識ひけらかすのやめたら?恥ずかしい。
People like you keep me employed😂
It does look pretty good the end result. However the first way you did it was perfectly fine and much faster
As for me, it is easier to solder the wires, rather than waste time, nerves and the length of the wire, besides, after soldering the wires hold tightly
This is a technique used for jointing higher size conductors
Its also highly dangerous to do that
Если провод в стенке (скрытый монтаж) то опять нельзя. У прибоя низкая температура плавления тт 170 до 270. И есть большой шанс что провод разогреется, прибой расплавится и капает вниз, что приведёт к пожару.
Just use a press joint.
The wires are small gauge automotive wiring. This means a simple splice like shown is good enough. Soldiers are not good enough because they crack with high vibration. They could have used proper connectors but for low voltage and low current application using a splice is good enough.
You accidentally make an inductor
this is kinda what i was thinking
I don't think this was an accident I think it was done out of malice.
The wires wound in opposite directions, hence won't be induction
It would also cause fire
My electrical engineering background includes owning a book on inductor design. I don't think what is shown in the video would increase inductance any more than negligibly over an intact straight piece of insulated braided wire.
接触抵抗で発熱し数年後絶縁被覆は劣化しています。圧着、圧接、ねじ端子台、スプリング端子台、はんだ接続、このいずれかの手段が必要です。
Один очень хороший электрик сказал, что лучше скрутки ещё ничего не придумали. Пайка, майка, клеммы- это всё фигня
日本語での解説があって助かる
But this is just a wikihow of a makeshift, it was not made to be the work of a professional electrician, a lot of work soldering and other complicated things
優れた電気技師?
ねじるだけじゃダメでしょ
抵抗が発生したり、品質のばらつきがあったりするので、工具は必要ですが圧着がコスパ最高です
圧着しきゃダメなのは分かるんだけど、しなかった場合の磁場の発生ってどういう理屈で起こるものなの?教えて欲しい
targeted audience:🧑🔧👨🏭
actual audience:👨🎓🧑🎓
This is the Western Union Splice. It was used to splice telegraph wires so they could be suspended in air and support their own weight under tension.
It does look very sturdy
That is right, but I was never told to pull the strands apart like that. Then again, I've only done this with solid wire.
Yeah, it's nothing new, been around for about 170 years.
@@jimthesoundman8641 What’s old is new again
Do we have that much time in the field while wiring
Absolutely Not...💀☠️👍👍👍👍
That guy's brain is going to explode when he learns about marrettes.
That's why he only make video.
If he's involved the house wiring .
I'm sure all the houses would faulty wiring
@@lookiook Ilyen kötést nem készítünk épületekben.
宗教上の理由で、圧着スリーブや配線コネクタが使えない人におすすめ
why fire in my house??????
😂🤣😆👍🏆
穴に入れる行為に何かを感じ取ったフェミニストの皆様にもおすすめです。
ちょうど使えなかったので参考にします
This comment was great. Something similar came to mind for me.
Is soldering now illegal?
It seems so
😂😂😂
not everyone owns an soldering iron
this is for places where soldering is almost impossible
it is illegal for this type of wire. soldering is not flexible.
Damn I can’t believe Home Depot was out of wire nuts that day😂
Electrician ❌️
Artist ✅️
Nah this will cause fire hazard. The wire will overheat and melt the insulation
The thicker the cable the less heat, thus why thicker cables can carry higher amps, but in this case the current would be suited to the cable not the join, meaning it won't overheat, but it's not a correct procedure for us electricians, just a simple tunnel connecter will be sufficient 👍
Attachment of ur example! please attach
But how about doing it for lower voltage, me thinks it should suffice
Go read your textbooks, dude...
Over 300 people actually agreed with this?!?!?
--------------------------------------------------
[Note: This comment is not focused on any particular "designated group" with regard to the TH-cam "hate speech" or "cyberbullying" policies. It simply reflects the author's opinion regarding a subject, which may or may not also pertain to an individual's actions demonstrated in the video. If any such individuals belong to any of the "designated groups", any commentary included is merely incidental to that grouping and such groups are not the focus of any comments. It's pathetic that this comment is necessary for the YouTube censors who are too stupid to figure it out otherwise.]
Now the wire became short what to do
Repeat the process with another cable
Make it long, duh
Have an apprentice go look for a wire stretcher 😂
This technique shows how to waste a costly copper wire in a second
Keep posting this is awesome 👌
I asked ChatGPT and this is what it said "The setup in your images appears to be a sturdy wire-joining technique, likely for electrical conductivity and durability. If used in an electrical circuit carrying current, the coiling could create a localized magnetic field. However, this would typically be negligible for most practical purposes unless designed for electromagnetic applications."
We use WAGO series 221 for these strands. Waste less wire and spend just few seconds to connect safely..
Не везде ваго прокатит ГМЛ никто неотменял
Yep.. Wago Lyfe.
those wagos suck
just re-wired my whole house top to bottom. Wago for the win. Especially the releasable ones if you are a noob :D
@@aeu569 That's all we work with now. But I'm commercial and not domestic.
Recommended for people who are allergic to crimp connectors or solder.
how about soldering it?
Yea one way the easy way
I almost always use the second method and haven't had a problem in decades.
А вы тоже одеваете термоусадку после того как уже все смотали? 😂😂😂
Ok!!! Now there is only 499 joint left.😊
Solder the answer was solder.
It takes 30 seconds for the gun to heat up and it doesn’t come undone easily and it garentees good connection
Or you know, an actual connector. It takes 5 seconds, is self-locking, insulated and requires no tools.
@ I have a personal problem with them. One on my bike got messed up and left me stranded soldering means the wire fails before the connection (if you’re not completely useless) but connecting tubes are a good idea for your saddle bags
That's heating coil you made there... That joint would heat up real quick
Yep😊
No. Heating coils have high resistance to convert electrical energy to heat. Also if you are talking about induction heating, they have insulator around the wire.
How? There is no insulation
I’m not an electrician and thus don’t quite understand the concerns brought up in the comments. My understanding is any time current flows thru a wire it creates a magnet and connection will get hotter if it’s not very good. Is the shrink tube not good insulation? Also, I learned the hard way you put the shrink tube on before you connect the wires.
@@naiwi2544 Tényleg nem vagy villanyszerelő.
Good ole scissoring technique to bind copper wire. Excellent
Glad he used a clear tube, i wouldn't wanna coverup such a nice job
Nobody is trying to braid two wires of copper together. Just as long as they connect and is well covered/sealed.
Ну поздравляю вы сделали катушку тесла, теперь металическая пыль которая возможно будет в месте соединения, например это лампочка в мастерской где частенько работают с металлом, будет собираться на кабеле и намагничиваться. А ещё ты потратил на это минуты 4, а если тебе нужно 500 соединений таких сделать. Лучше по номальному взять обыкновенную медную втулку и обжать, а потом термоусадкой, если нет такой обжимки бери паяльником, если нет паяльника купи специльные штуки для соединения проводов, если и их нет, то обыкновенное соединение с термоусадкой или слоемизоленты исправит это дело.
熱収縮チューブ使用はコスト的にどうなんだろうか
この太さの電線ならば被覆付きスリーブの方が適切でなはいでしょうか
СИНЕЙ изоленты!!!
Что за бред , катушка электромагнитная индукция появляется в замкнутом магнитном поле , тип на видео сделал просто огромную скрутку , но провода не замкнуты которые он заворачивал , ты вообще знаешь сколько в катушке витков чтобы получить из нее хотя бы простенький магнит , я на работе делал катушку 2200 витков , и то на маленькую мощность , так что не пиши чепуху
Ok, the second one, just get a wire nut and cap it off, brother. Most of what you're showing could lead to long term damage or even start a fire. (Yes, I'm an electrician, there are codes to follow for a reason)
The wires are automotive wiring.
Are you doing a tesla coil? What was the point.
Allerdings sind die drähte untereinander verbunden, für ein magnetfeld müssen die elektronen im kreis laufen.
I understand this is done when you are using a cable that you know will be pulling some force from time to time, and you don't want it disconnecting in one of those times. So you do it this way so it stays held tight for the soft pulls. An electrician told me this. Otherwise yeah you don't truly need to do it this way since it just wasted time and wire.
Wire nuts? Connector blocks?
Because we aren't stupid Merkins...
Wagos... Bluepoints...
I'm learning.. Thank you❤🌹 👍
while this will work to make it secure, it is very wasteful , prone to overheat, and might cause magnetic interference, which could be a big problem in places like a hospital, or other places with high precision electronics.
What name for the white transparent tub .how to ask the store.😊😊
Heat shrink tubing.
Sugar strip Connector .
Holy shit, this guy is teaching people how to burn down their house and he's not off youtube yet
Скрутить 2 провода: ❌
Выпендриваться красивой техникой закручивания провода, тратя время, деньги и провод: ✅
Creating solution for the problem we never had 😅
I swear man everytime i see this all i can think of is electric hazard and electricsl fire
💯
You should solder the joint, or use a strip connector.
Good and responsible workmanship.
This is a correct and secure way to connect cord ends.
You should try to use less exposed wire though 0,5 to 1 cm are more than enough. This also only works with multi-wire cords, if you have a single-wire cord you will require clamps. The shrink tube is also a bit large, I would have taken a smaller size to ensure a tighter fit.
But those are just my two cents.
Do wire splice connectors not exist in this video?
Why do something correctly when you can do it half-assed for ten times the cost/time?
I feel like those cut ends pointing out like that would make it more likely to create holes due to wear and tear from use.
He definitely missed his physics class. If he had attended it, he would know that doing this causes a lot of wastage of electric current due to high resistance. A joint should be kept as minimal as possible.
Bro, is there any way to measure the current capacity differences in a continuous wire and a joint of this kind or other joints?
Also, would a joint made by melting the copper flow into each other at the joint, making it a somewhat continuous connection, be as good as an actual continuous wire?
Is there any particular way to get almost no degradation in current capacity with wire joints?
Well please go call Toyota, Honda, nissan, audi. BMW, Volvo, keyworth and ford.... cause this is how there engineers want it done. It's pretty much an industry standard way
This would be alot of effort and extra wire in normal circumstances, but if you were pulling this through a conduit it would be unmatched.
世界中の本職の皆さんがツッコミ入れてるの面白いw
такая скрутка на линии может пригодиться, там где есть натяжение, а в обычной жизни можно сделать гораздо проще
Британка запрещена. Научат умники из интернета.
@@VALERMAN33почему?
@@VV-vv3qz потому что скруток в ПУЭ нет. А если нет упоминания то и нельзя. Пайка, опресовка либо болтовое соединение. А британка это скрутка.
That is called the Brittania joint used for Overhead conductors.
Хоть один нормальный комментарий!
Does soldering and cable connectors not exist?
personally, I'd just throw in a crimp connection, but if you dont have anything but heat shrink and want a really strong connection i giess this works 😂 just alot of effort
: What do you do for a living?
: I am a Wire stylist ✂️
まぁ、屋内配線ではなく単なる工作ならそれで良いと思うよ。
でもそれが万一屋内配線なら最低でもハンダ付けはしよう。
それにしても外国ではより線も建築用ゆ使えるのかね。
✕ 圧着スリーブと圧着ペンチで施工しましょう
what did we shoud do if we didnt have alot of wire
Mostly you won’t even conect 2 wires you’ll just pull a new cable that is long enough
Okie nice wrapping idea for a pendent or a chain hook
Mesh splices and lap splices are an easy way to connect wires that I usually do.
Were they do this at
Nobody knows buddy, that's the deal, they do that bulls(hit) and we just see it we like it and it become popular
Were wire nuts not available???
That would of been fine. Ridiculous splice.
If your doing this instead of going to the store to get some, you have too much patience. This also looks like it would cost more than just getting some wire nuts.
This is not even in the NEC so a fine will be on its way
To fill one pothole 🕳️ man built entire national🛣️ highway 😭
Yes we are wrong you are the best work
Meu tempo de trabalho: 10 segundos
Seu tempo de trabalho: 10 minutos
Electrician whole day:- bauji bas ek wire jodi hai 500₹ dedo😂😂😂😂
I was taught that call that a Western Union splice. Going back to telegraph days.
what about tip in last selution
Or a parallel butt splice.
Or a heartstring solder splice.
That way you don't have a 4 inch potential fire source
Don't forget to slip the clear piece over before you do that nice work
Him be like :
❌
❌
*Cook something in oven*
*Five years later*
✔️
Don't you think that would cause electrical resistance to the flow of current?
Would soldering work better?
Technically yes, but soldering requires a proper station where wires don't move, plus soldering produces fumes, plus we have to hear up the iron, it is a lot of work, and it makes the wire brittle, so either your soldering iron is strong enough to melt the copper, then yes, still not that much because it would make it brittle, then no if you are using solder
WTF ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT?!?!? SOLDERING MAKING THE WIRE BRITTLE?!? Tell me something. What color is the sky in your world?!?
@@googlestudy-n6f During soldering, the copper is _not_ melted, but connected with molten tin.
@@Rotorhead1651 it is pretty common physics, people twist wires so that when they bend they have equal stress on inside and outside, plus we use things like cooper and stretch them till they are like few mm thick, by adding solder, you practically take that ability away, that is why we only use soldering on... circuit boards and small electronics and not big voltage mama wires
@@Rotorhead1651 and the color of sky is a bit reddish for some reason
Curious, how many electricians follow your suggested joining of wires, as low as 25%, or much higher? Or lower?
1% and even that when they are bored hahahaha
hook wire, use two pliers to twist together tight, use a lighter and a drop of solder, and its done
you just put the wires together put tape in the middle and boom done👌
will the magnetic field produced in this cause any problems?
wthat type of splice is that?
That looks pretty good but how about a little solder to really make it safe?
Building ka contract lia tha ki 3 months de dunga sab wireing ka karke ye video dekhi ab 3 saal hohaye abtak puri nahi ho ra😊hiy😂😂😂
Schon mal was von Klemmen gehört? Z.B. von WAGO-Klemmen
NACH DEN SCHWARZEN PFOTEN DIE DER HAT, WOHNT ER IN BIMBOMANIEN UND DA GIBT'S KEINE WAGO'S 😜😂🤣🥳
Yeh plastic khn milti h
India ma Milti ha
Second method works just fine?
You're joking......right? 🤨
Wrong ticked are all very usefull in temporary usage.
Right ones are for Permanent usage.
option 2 would have been fine if you made a 3rd twist.....or just used solid wire instead of strand
Step 1 & 2: How to make the Loose Connection
Step 3:How to make proper Joint😊
A building inspector might have a few words about that.
How much heat it will cause
I also think that twisting is the technology of the future, but it's overkill
This is like a Steven Seagal demo - all choreographed kicks and punches. Nobody would do this on the field.