During the timespan of this video,…. I’ve plugged in my iron,… found my lost flux,…… unwinded my solder,…. Soldered fourteen connections,…. Then allowed the iron to cool to room temperature
Where's all this extra wire coming from? Everytime I am trying to repair a wire harness I feel like I need tweezers just to mate the wires let alone twist them is 3 foot of bare wire. 🤣
During this video I got distracted by the pigeons on my air conditioner, watched them mate, waited for the female to lay eggs, watched the eggs hatch and grow up. Now they are a family. It was fascinating.
A good idea that could have been presented less tediously. This could have been a one minute video without watching you struggle with stripping insulation three times for a minute at a time and then showing two wrong ways before showing a correct way. This could, and should have been a one minute video. In the end the demonstration is valuable, but you make your viewer work hard to get it - for those who watched the whole thing.
I fully understand your point and skipped the majority of it myself but then I suppose it is a good thing for complete new beginners to see as they might struggle too and wonder if they're doing it wrong. That's the beauty of having the skip forward button...
The final wire twist is called a "Western Union Splice". I was taught this splice in high school in my Electrical Installation class. Can be used with solid wire also. Soldering optional. I use this splice to lengthen wire for my train layout. You should use the same gauge wire because of current and/or line drop in the run. I am a retired electrician, worked on NYC subways & electrician's mate, US Navy..
wouldnt a butt splice or similar be better though? I understand not always great to have addition materials and tools (crimpers), but the best splice is would probably be irreversibly crimped. Thats why the NEC requires irreversible crimps as the only means to splice grounding electrodes
Knowing how to 'not' do something is equally critical in knowing how to do something. Invention and science are reliant on failure. Patience is essential to saturation in the learning process. Consider how many people may have never done either process. For those, they leaned more than the impatient.
Sh.t I wish I read this before wasting 7 mins 30 seconds. Well 9 mins really considering it should take 11 seconds to demonstrate such a simple solution.
I have been doing wiring connections for the past 20 years with my brother who is an electrical engineer, and I'm his unofficial wiring technician LOL. I know the author's intention is to educate those who may be doing wiring connections wrong. Actually I appreciate him/her for doing this video. We don't know how many electrical fires he has prevented by teaching this method, so there's no point in bashing him/her.
Удивительное дело. Я всегда так скручивал, но такого секрета (что это правильный способ) вовсе и не знал. Просто считал, что так удобнее. Во как бывает!
10 seconds of information that is not even correct. it's 3 wrong methods in a row. The third was closest to being something that is not correct but passable, with a minor change, would be 10 times more difficult to pull apart. Make the X like in the third try but fold them in opposite directions like a chain link, then twist in opposite directions.. it'll be stronger by far... but that's allot of exposed wire to tape up. I will explain how a connection should be made properly if anyone is interested. LMK, Mitch
I am so glad you found it out. I am 95 years old and I did this for the last 85 years. In electronic we also solded them after and a shrink tube for insolation.
The soldering and shrink tubing could have fitted in the 9 minutes as well as the twist to show a professional job. Congratulations on your 95 years and hope you enjoy many more. Cheers.
BUT no shrink tubing back then. Actually when I was an Apprentice Instrument Fitter in 1971 no shrinky then BUT an ingenious tool that fitted inside rubber tubing and stretched it from the inside to fit over various sized joins. We would have looked funny packing hair driers!
This is called a "Linesman Wire Splice", used long before all the connectors came to be. Used in the early days when nothing else was available in the Rural areas. Still the best and strongest method. Taught to me by David Epley, Veteran of the US Air Force and Electronics expert, Winchester, Indiana. Long Live "Dave".
The whole goal is to get a 9-minute video out of a 20-second lineman splice. This guy's a pro, as he got 33 million views and corresponding time on site revenue.
Удивительно! Невероятно! Тайные технологии которые от нас скрывали! А говорят еще ютуб круче телека, ха! Так тут и желтизна заголовков тоже покруче Малахова! А если серьезно и совсем строго судить то такие скрутки очень уж бытовой вариант, я не электрик но имел с этим дело и вроде как всегда цельные провода рекомендуют прокладывать и в редких случаях если так сказать звезды не сошлись то такие концы надо заводить в коробку а там уже клеймы, а если их нет то скрутку делать и лудить. Вроде есть какие-то правила и нормы которые не просто так написаны.
На первом курсе приборостроительного факультета института нас обучали десятку различных скруток. Только перед этим нужно зачищать провода от лака и потом покрывать припоем место скрутки.
I was taught to do this splice in the 6th grade in basic electricity class. They called it the “western union splice”. It was used when they ran thousands of miles of telegraph wire across the US. I wish kids in school could learn stuff like this.
Что то мало он зачищал, надо было не меньше чем пол метра скрутку делать, скряга видать пожалел... Так бы ещё минут на 20 растянул ролик, можно было и подремать за это время... 😴🤣🤣🤣
@@demid2003 в точку.в третьем пятно контакта в середине и оно слабое.т.е. как такого прижима там нет. мне достаточно и первого способа.хорошо его стягиваю,загибаю на одну из сторон и прижимаю плосками.далее в термоусадку и хрен так просто разорвешь,да и задачи никогда нету чего то вешать на провода😁
It's all wasted time. The last way is the one I would have used to start. I thought it was going to be a better way, but it's the same method everyone uses all along.
Not that this is even close to the right way. No matter how tight you make it and it seems OK at first, this will loosen and pull through under any real strain over time. You don't wrap them across each other but then keep going in the same direction, you wrap them across then reverse direction so they wrap back on themselves. That makes a mechanical eye loop. But you don't do that either, since a single loop would be a terrible connection. You fan the strands out, and push them through each other, then wrap back on themselves. You can also fan them through each other multiple times instead of just once, for an even better connection. It's funny anyone would even make a video on this.. A lot of 8 or 10 year old little girls will have way more advanced twisting and braiding skills, go watch some of their videos instead and be better at it.
Guys, this looks like 12 volt wiring. "LOOKS". Not to say it is. But I'm assuming it's not going to be used to pull a stuck truck out of a hole. IF there's no strain on the splice, and there shouldn't be, this "Western Union" splice will work for most applications.
Przyznam szczerze, że film zaskakujący. Ta drobiazgowość ma tu swój sens, w postaci rozczarowania. Im więcej uwagi i czasu, tym rozczarowanie większe. I za drugim razem było to samo. Za trzecim, gdy zobaczyłam metodę, myślałam, że będzie to samo, bo wydawało się to najgorszym rozwiązaniem .Tym większe moje zdziwienie, że właśnie ta metoda była najskuteczniejsza. Tak więc można się pośmiać z żółwiego tempa, ale właściwa metoda na długo zostanie mi w pamięci. Dziękuję, było warto! :)
Yeah that may be true but atleast he was showing a youngin's such as myself the incorrect way so that i dont mess up the procedure. Y'dont gotta be a jackass. G'day
There's lots of ways to splice and get a good, neat connection. Personally, I would probably solder and use shrink tube on that connection. That's just me. Good job.
Мало того что на 9минут растянул, так ещё и непонятно зачем скрутке нужна такая прочность на разрыв) Ну раз 178тыс челов лайкнули, значит это очень полезное видео)))
Madre mía, cuanto tiempo esperando el resultado de la "Increíble idea" para empalmar conductores, eso ya lo aprendí yo al hacer la antígua Oficialía (Formación Profesional de 3 años) hace 50 años, y aún más seguro cuando lo estañabas. ¿Es que ya no enseñan como empalmar conductores en las escuelas? De todos modos gracias por la voluntad porque, según veo por los comentarios, ha sido util a otras personas. Saludos.
During the timespan of this video, I met a girl, cooked her diner, got her pregnant, got a son, raised him as a man, sent him to college to be a electrical engineer, supported him through his first period on the job and then asked him to correctly connect my wires. He said no.
Oh my god, how may time I spend wating for to see the "Incredible Idea" for to connet conductors, this is something what I learn 50 years ago, in the school. Is it that they no longer teach this in schools? Anyway, thanks for the will because, as I see from the comments, it has been useful to other people. Greetings.
9 min video that could have easily been 1 minute. There's a thing called pacing in video, this pacing was like watching grass grow. Seriously we don't need all the trimming parts, just get to the point.
Честно говоря я тоже подохренел немног, как это можно было растянуть на 10 минут)) И я бы не ставил крест на первой скрутке, в определённых ситуациях она также имеет право на существование.
The last method, the X-twist is how I was taught to make a proper solder connection in grade school 25 yrs ago and it hasn't let me down. It prevents any hot spots in the connection where amps are being choked.
Planes & cars or any vibrating machinery will break your solder joint at its weakest point... from solder to no solder. Never wondered why all car connections are cold clamped to their respective plugs. Well British & Australian cars are. (I should say WERE)
@@leewilkerson8185 NAH. It's a Western Union Splice -- named after the telegraph outfit that ran wire all over the U.S.A.. It HAD to be right, and fail-safe.
@@SlikLizrd, I stand corrected. Western Union splice. I read and learned about it in the 60s, so I can call it what I want now. :D You knew exactly what I meant which means you know the method. BTW, I know more about the splice itself than I know about the name which made little difference to the splices I made.
As a boy on the farm, we repaired barbed wire fencing using this method and then stretched the wire taut. The twisted wire held against the horses & cattle until the wire rusted to brittle. We also used this method for electric fencing - but I saw this video and thought you were going to show why one method of wire joining was better ELECTRICALLY from another....electric wire isn't supposed to carry heavy loads, but the high tension power lines are joined in this manner without wire nuts or junction devices. A very long video for wires that should be current bearing, not load bearing.
el que hizo este video deveria haber estudiado solo tres meses de un curso de electricidad, el empalme que usa al final tiene un nombre se llama WESTER UNION , es uno de los empalmes basicos del electricista y se hacia cuando se usaba alambre , el tema es que no necesitas en electricidad que tenga resistencia a la traccion pues seria de burrro empalmar un cable y tenderlo tirante el tema pasa por la conductividad y todos los utilizados alli cumplen ese requisito, o sea orejeras para el que hizo el video y al rincon , LO COMETO AQUI PUES NO ME PERMITEN RESPONDER EL VIDEO DIRECTAMENTE
@Robert Shorthill do I get wasted ? sure guy, but not that much , its too labor intensive with little payback , steady as she goes , keep it fried then we can get it on, and then we can talk about this while a few good off duty fuckers making a call for it the tip, but that's before work essentially
I once learned..., methodically, you can speak about wrong methods but never show them. Something you visualize stays in the brain. Therefore always show only the proper way and leave the crap behind.
Before making the splice you must twist the strands of each wire tightly so you don't have any little wire "hairs" sticking out and then make a 90 degree bend in the stripped part before you start winding them together. Makes it much neater and more secure. THEN you solder it. This is the Western Union splice.
well in the beginning they didn't have solder and the wire was not stranded, it was solid steel wire not copper, so doing the western union splice worked just fine and the knot would never pull apart even with tension on them.
I've never heard it being called to Western Union Splice. But thanks for the information. I'm sure you're either Electrical Engineer or Electrical Lineman. To know the correct Terminology.
@@MarkORoth-fu2cy I'm just a jive-ass White boy from North Philly, and I learned the Western Union Splice in high-school Electric Shop. Frankford High, 1952.
I was a mechanic for 20 years, then moved into the sound business for the next thirty. I doubt if I've had to connect wires like this more than half a dozen times.
I don;t know which part of the video to watch, it's tedious but it looks like the purpose is to show the well established telephone splice. Good to see you discovered it and maybe taught others, it's the way to go when possible.
Молодец, хороший подход! Человек устроен именно так, что может все, абсолютно все, что нужно для его комфортного проживания. В пятом информационном уровне нашей планеты хранится вся информация, о всем, что было и может еще быть придумано человеком. Нужно только научиться, как туда войти и считать нужную информацию. Но, для этого необходимо пройти обучение в университете эволюции разума(НАУ ЭРА), где преподаватели, кандидаты и доктора наук расскажут, покажут и научат, как это сделать. Даже в сказках, былинах, мифах и поговорках такая информация дошла до нас: скатерть самобранка, сапоги скороходы, ковер самолет, лампа Алладина, шапка невидимка, молодильное яблоко и многое другое. Нам необходимо заново сесть за парты, обучиться и быстро сменить свое средневековое мировоззрение с потребительского на созидательное, что бы изменить наш мир к лучшему, сохранить его и передать нашим детям. Дверь НАУ ЭРА открыта для всех желающих.
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects. -Robert A. Heinlein Человек должен уметь сменить подгузник, спланировать вторжение, зарезать свинью, управлять кораблем, спроектировать здание, написать сонет, сбалансировать счета, построить стену, поставить кость, утешать умирающих, принимать приказы, отдавать приказывать, сотрудничать, действовать в одиночку, решать уравнения, анализировать новую проблему, вносить навоз, программировать компьютер, готовить вкусную еду, эффективно бороться, храбро умереть. Специализация - насекомые. -Роберт А. Хайнлайн
Класс...особенно про потребительское и созидательное и тут же примеры - ПРО СКАТЕРТИ САМОБРАНКИ И ТД И ТП...ну сами понимаете то ещё СОЗИДАНИЕ!!! - лентяйство Емели лежу на печи и по щючьему хотению ,СОЗИДАЮ'.
Wow, Thanks for that. Learned that in Exploratory Week in Electrical Class in 1982. Its called a western union connection. Has been around a long time.
Yup, western union splice, learned it when I was about 5 years old from a kids book on electricity, that was around 1964. I use it all the time for not so critical stuff and cover it with marine heat shrink. It's easier than soldering or crimping when crawling around underneath a trailer and is just fine for 12 volt lights.
@@mathbee If a Western Union Splice is soldered in a practical application, in its intended use (one that is under motion AND tensile load) it will fail in a matter of hours due to metal fatigue.
In short, the standard cable junction that is learned in technical school. In practice it can't always be done. Sometimes because we can't turn off the electricity. Other times because there is no place to maneuver with your hands.
Ты немного не правильно скрутку делаешь. Два провода надо распушить. Затем в распушенные проводки засунуть проводки второго провода, как пальцы в пальцы и уж после этого надо скручивать. Вот тогда никогда не распутать. (учили в школе в 1964 году).
@@viktorzabelin3663 Судя по тому что 30 лет крутишь, САМ, я и думал что эту фразу должен знать. Не бери в голову, будь попроще.🤭 Молодое поколение надо же учить, ты ж не снял про это видос. А книжек сейчас никто не читает. Только тик-ток, ну ютуб.
Последний способ хорош ... для троса буксировочного)) Чем первые два способа не устраивали автора? Незачем провода тянуть-на них что то вешать будут что ли?
Thanks for showing all the different ways that fail and the one that works so we won’t repeat the same mistakes or waste the same amount of time and still be able to reconnect the broken wire together securely without other tools.
Really? And how 1) do you do that if you are joining wires that can't be rotated and 2) do you achieve a joint that won't just fall apart - without twisting the conductor strands across eachother you can't know, unless you tug on it to check, and I bet you a penny that it will fall apart when you do that. I would use that technique if I was also going to solder that joint - it would give the lowerest resistance joint - but it is mechanically too weak without solder.
Nothing beats a 120 year old plus Western Union splice!!!! Came in handy back in the day when the lines were long and large in diameter with a lot of sagging to them!!! Tim KC8SLC
То чувство, когда только купил инструмент снимающий изоляцию. Вася молодец, но надо было подробно показать все стадии покупки этого волшебного кабеля. А то, как то не полная картина...
During the timespan of this video,…. I’ve plugged in my iron,… found my lost flux,…… unwinded my solder,…. Soldered fourteen connections,…. Then allowed the iron to cool to room temperature
Where's all this extra wire coming from? Everytime I am trying to repair a wire harness I feel like I need tweezers just to mate the wires let alone twist them is 3 foot of bare wire. 🤣
🤣😂
이게 뭐야
th-cam.com/video/GbRtMjRvP4g/w-d-xo.html
👍🤣🤣🤣
During this video I got distracted by the pigeons on my air conditioner, watched them mate, waited for the female to lay eggs, watched the eggs hatch and grow up. Now they are a family. It was fascinating.
😂
A good idea that could have been presented less tediously. This could have been a one minute video without watching you struggle with stripping insulation three times for a minute at a time and then showing two wrong ways before showing a correct way. This could, and should have been a one minute video. In the end the demonstration is valuable, but you make your viewer work hard to get it - for those who watched the whole thing.
A good comment that could have been three words long.
@@DrLoverLover Ha! Cha ching! 😂🤣
I fully understand your point and skipped the majority of it myself but then I suppose it is a good thing for complete new beginners to see as they might struggle too and wonder if they're doing it wrong. That's the beauty of having the skip forward button...
Yes, it’s almost painful to watch someone struggle with a pair of wire cutters. I guess they don’t teach basic hand tools anymore in school
But if the video was only a minute long we would miss out on all this great obnoxious rave music that has permeated throughout all of TH-cam.
The final wire twist is called a "Western Union Splice". I was taught this splice in high school in my Electrical Installation class. Can be used with solid wire also. Soldering optional. I use this splice to lengthen wire for my train layout. You should use the same gauge wire because of current and/or line drop in the run. I am a retired electrician, worked on NYC subways & electrician's mate, US Navy..
wouldnt a butt splice or similar be better though? I understand not always great to have addition materials and tools (crimpers), but the best splice is would probably be irreversibly crimped. Thats why the NEC requires irreversible crimps as the only means to splice grounding electrodes
Yep. Grade 9 high school, Western Union.
I had a mate who was an electrician in the Navy too.
Совершенно верно. 9 класс СССР.
There's a million ways to do everything wrong, next time don't waste peoples time, just show the right way.
Knowing how to 'not' do something is equally critical in knowing how to do something. Invention and science are reliant on failure. Patience is essential to saturation in the learning process. Consider how many people may have never done either process. For those, they leaned more than the impatient.
@@AtomkeySinclair Nonsense!
Show how to do the right way!
And that´s it!!
Or do you REALLY need to see how to do the wrong way?
um, you're browsing random videos on youtube. you were wasting time before you stumbled here and you'll likely be wasting time long after this.
He clearly isn't an electrician or knows about impedance. This is definitely not the right way. Fine for low voltage applications, but still wrong.
Amen!!!!
The video starts at 0:7:30
That's what can be useful out of it.
thanks
i watched for 3min, then i stopped and scrolled down comments, found this thx . i was jsut curious but this vid...glad i didnt finish it :P
Nah, that 'fix' can't be used anywhere. It's not even legal. If you gonna fix a wire, do it proper.
@@vikingpowered868 I see it as a useful tip for pulling not fixing.
Sh.t I wish I read this before wasting 7 mins 30 seconds. Well 9 mins really considering it should take 11 seconds to demonstrate such a simple solution.
Nothing in this video can be helpful, you never do this with cables. There's always a more appropriate way to do it than this shit.
I started watching this when I was 20. Now I'm 50years old. FFS
shoulda look at the thumbnail and that is it.
😂😂😂😂😂😂
LoL i feel u bro
If it wasn't for your comment and the fast forward feature, I would have also lost 20 years of my life
lol
Идея конечно обалденная, особенно для тех, у кого проблемы со сном.
Этой идеи лет сто , как существуют провода ! Ролик ужасно растянут согласен !
hats off to you. it takes a lot of courage making this a 9 minute video lol
And yet I sat threw the whole thing and honestly I think I'll start wiring my wires like this. It's a pretty good idea. TBH
@@AmandaNicholas if you don’t have a soldering iron then yes this is the most effective option
1ㅣ
Mto bem feito essa emenda focou top
it will took 1 minute 30 seconds for this info.
I have been doing wiring connections for the past 20 years with my brother who is an electrical engineer, and I'm his unofficial wiring technician LOL. I know the author's intention is to educate those who may be doing wiring connections wrong. Actually I appreciate him/her for doing this video. We don't know how many electrical fires he has prevented by teaching this method, so there's no point in bashing him/her.
Your point is well taken, but I think people object to the hubris of implying that the Western Union splice was his own "awesome idea"
Удивительное дело. Я всегда так скручивал, но такого секрета (что это правильный способ) вовсе и не знал. Просто считал, что так удобнее. Во как бывает!
This video is wasting time of 9 minutes, to get information of 10 seconds !
9 minutes and 11 seconds of our lives we will never get back ...
7:20 Chase, cut to.
10 seconds of information that is not even correct. it's 3 wrong methods in a row.
The third was closest to being something that is not correct but passable, with a minor change, would be 10 times more difficult to pull apart.
Make the X like in the third try but fold them in opposite directions like a chain link, then twist in opposite directions..
it'll be stronger by far... but that's allot of exposed wire to tape up.
I will explain how a connection should be made properly if anyone is interested.
LMK, Mitch
книги на макулатуру сдали и делают открытия мне стыдн
@@TooSlowTube kmñ
Какой же это талант надо иметь, растянуть на 9 минут, что можно за 1 минуту сделать, да еще столько просмотров .
ну и дизов рекордное количество
..всё дело в названии ролика, все ждали когда-же наконец-то удивят :-)
Школьник : - Ма,глянь как я могу! )
Изобретение велосипеда
Он сделал это! Я уже не надеялся.
I am so glad you found it out. I am 95 years old and I did this for the last 85 years. In electronic we also solded them after and a shrink tube for insolation.
The soldering and shrink tubing could have fitted in the 9 minutes as well as the twist to show a professional job. Congratulations on your 95 years and hope you enjoy many more. Cheers.
There was electricity back then?
@@CacD47 in 1831, Michael Faraday invented the electric dynamo - essentially a crude power generator - that used a magnet that moved inside a coil.
BUT no shrink tubing back then. Actually when I was an Apprentice Instrument Fitter in 1971 no shrinky then BUT an ingenious tool that fitted inside rubber tubing and stretched it from the inside to fit over various sized joins. We would have looked funny packing hair driers!
@@topcatandgang AND a cage to put it in!
This is called a "Linesman Wire Splice", used long before all the connectors came to be. Used in the early days when nothing else was available in the Rural areas. Still the best and strongest method. Taught to me by David Epley, Veteran of the US Air Force and Electronics expert, Winchester, Indiana. Long Live "Dave".
Exactly! Taught to me in High School Shop Class 1961
А говорили что уних производительностьвысокая за это время я штук двадцать скруток проведу
Это видео можно не смотреть, а просто если хочется поржать, прочитать комментарии. Сколько же у нас талантливых и юморных людей))))🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
The whole goal is to get a 9-minute video out of a 20-second lineman splice. This guy's a pro, as he got 33 million views and corresponding time on site revenue.
I love it when the views outnumber the worlds population!
Do như cuc
Total waste of time. Fool me once...
@@gregorywarren1 population is almost 8 billion, sure you thought that one through?
Exactly, and here we are driving the revenue some more making comments. Pure genius!
Я только что узнал что пользуюсь УДИВИТЕЛЬНОЙ ИДЕЕЙ, уже лет 40🙄🤔😀
Удивительно! Невероятно! Тайные технологии которые от нас скрывали! А говорят еще ютуб круче телека, ха! Так тут и желтизна заголовков тоже покруче Малахова!
А если серьезно и совсем строго судить то такие скрутки очень уж бытовой вариант, я не электрик но имел с этим дело и вроде как всегда цельные провода рекомендуют прокладывать и в редких случаях если так сказать звезды не сошлись то такие концы надо заводить в коробку а там уже клеймы, а если их нет то скрутку делать и лудить. Вроде есть какие-то правила и нормы которые не просто так написаны.
На первом курсе приборостроительного факультета института нас обучали десятку различных скруток. Только перед этим нужно зачищать провода от лака и потом покрывать припоем место скрутки.
И не говори, я тоже больше 40ка именно так и делаю, хотя не электрик и никогда им не был! Детсад достал в виртуалке всякой ерундой!
А я сколько себя помню, мне за 70...
Да вы гений, вы использовали "удивительное" открытие еще до его открытия автором ролика. :)))
Это же надо просто талант иметь, чтобы на 9 минут сопли по тарелке так развести!!! 22500000 просмотров и у него еще 779 тыс. подписчиков!!! Я хуею!
Идиот козёл только время потерял
you are rongue😂😂😂😂😂👎👎👎👎this is the best way 100% like original resistance cable.th-cam.com/video/q_NPUsSUAbk/w-d-xo.html
Он мне мозг просто взорвал своим видео. Я думал что отупел после видоса.
Просто он увидел книгу по электрики из СССР )
Ждем видео про гильзы, клемники и т.д
I was taught to do this splice in the 6th grade in basic electricity class. They called it the “western union splice”. It was used when they ran thousands of miles of telegraph wire across the US. I wish kids in school could learn stuff like this.
Что то мало он зачищал, надо было не меньше чем пол метра скрутку делать, скряга видать пожалел... Так бы ещё минут на 20 растянул ролик, можно было и подремать за это время... 😴🤣🤣🤣
последняя скрутка самая дерьмовая как раз. самая нормальная вторая, всегда такой пользуюсь
@@demid2003 в точку.в третьем пятно контакта в середине и оно слабое.т.е. как такого прижима там нет.
мне достаточно и первого способа.хорошо его стягиваю,загибаю на одну из сторон и прижимаю плосками.далее в термоусадку и хрен так просто разорвешь,да и задачи никогда нету чего то вешать на провода😁
@@sergey59rus он кабель не для токопровода делал, а чтоб повешаться наверняка.
@@taurvo3 тогда рядом мыло надо было положить
В голосину ржу)))
Never been through soo much pain watching someone try to strip wire
Слишком короткий ролик получился, нужно было заснять полностью поход в магазин, за проводами и покупку.
Как точно ещё и производство этого провода
@@ПашаЛебедев-ф7у, в смысле провода? А инструментов?!
а лучше с момента зачатия этого "электрика"
одним кадром,причем,чтоб было
+2ух годовое пиление женой:
-"Когда ты лампочку на кухне починишь-Как права была мама-зачем я за тебя вышла...!!"
自分2番目の方法で更に残った2本をネジって寝かせてテープ巻いてます
3番目の方法は細い線でも同じ強度出ますか?
今回は針金みたいな硬い線だから出来る技のような?
Next up: AWESOME IDEA! HOW TO OPEN A DOOR! (kicks down 4 doors then uses the door handle)
Ohh shiet was the first 4 attempts wrong?
so i have been it wrong then
Lmao
Yo this made my day fr
I'd subscribe.
Skip to 4.30, avoid the 'helpful' wrong ways that waste your time.
It's all wasted time. The last way is the one I would have used to start. I thought it was going to be a better way, but it's the same method everyone uses all along.
Not that this is even close to the right way. No matter how tight you make it and it seems OK at first, this will loosen and pull through under any real strain over time. You don't wrap them across each other but then keep going in the same direction, you wrap them across then reverse direction so they wrap back on themselves. That makes a mechanical eye loop. But you don't do that either, since a single loop would be a terrible connection. You fan the strands out, and push them through each other, then wrap back on themselves. You can also fan them through each other multiple times instead of just once, for an even better connection.
It's funny anyone would even make a video on this.. A lot of 8 or 10 year old little girls will have way more advanced twisting and braiding skills, go watch some of their videos instead and be better at it.
Does this guy think he invented the "Western Union splice?"
I
Guys, this looks like 12 volt wiring. "LOOKS". Not to say it is. But I'm assuming it's not going to be used to pull a stuck truck out of a hole. IF there's no strain on the splice, and there shouldn't be, this "Western Union" splice will work for most applications.
After watching the whole video, it showed me the method I have been using forever. Darnit.
Nicholas Schwankl Good to know !!!!! 😄
Yup, you, the commenter below your comment and me, know it as the Western Union splice. It's been around since Boston was a prairie.
Przyznam szczerze, że film zaskakujący. Ta drobiazgowość ma tu swój sens, w postaci rozczarowania. Im więcej uwagi i czasu, tym rozczarowanie większe. I za drugim razem było to samo. Za trzecim, gdy zobaczyłam metodę, myślałam, że będzie to samo, bo wydawało się to najgorszym rozwiązaniem .Tym większe moje zdziwienie, że właśnie ta metoda była najskuteczniejsza. Tak więc można się pośmiać z żółwiego tempa, ale właściwa metoda na długo zostanie mi w pamięci. Dziękuję, było warto! :)
There goes nearly 10 minutes of my life that isn't coming back
Get the 16x speed chrome extension.
That's why I come to comments first. Thanks for the heads up. I guess the 56K thumbs downs didn't hurt either. I'll add mine to it. 😉
So glad I just fast forwarded through all that to see you do a simple line-man's splice at the end that they've been doing for almost a century now.
Me too. It was called The Western Union when I was taught over 50 years ago.Cheers
i totally agree ;)))
I was also thinking that it would help if they had some decent tools.
Yeah that may be true but atleast he was showing a youngin's such as myself the incorrect way so that i dont mess up the procedure. Y'dont gotta be a jackass. G'day
There's lots of ways to splice and get a good, neat connection. Personally, I would probably solder and use shrink tube on that connection. That's just me. Good job.
That's how NASA does it with soldier.
Excelent vídeo My friend coagrulations 🎉
класное пособие как видос на 30 секунд растянуть на 9 минут.... жесть просто!
Как собачья песня
Три скрутки. К концу испытаний ослаб и третью скрутку разорвать "ниасилил".
зато посмотрите какие восторженные коменты на английском. )) пздец педанты
Мало того что на 9минут растянул, так ещё и непонятно зачем скрутке нужна такая прочность на разрыв)
Ну раз 178тыс челов лайкнули, значит это очень полезное видео)))
Так добрую часть времени показывает, как нужно пыжиться со стягиванием изоляции, вместо того чтобы просто надрезать её повдоль канцелярским ножом.
I’m going to save everybody 7:25 of their lives by helping them skip ahead to the right way.
i wish i read your comment earlier..
@@LILSISTR lolilol same here ;)
✌
@@LILSISTR ... same bro. i mean sister.
SKIP to 4:28 to see how to actually do it. thank me later.
You saved 4 minutes of my life thank you
jeez...thank u!
The hero we need
FPVREVIEWS you can assassinate your kids in GTA?
Except even the final method is incorrect and wouldn't pass code in most places.
Madre mía, cuanto tiempo esperando el resultado de la "Increíble idea" para empalmar conductores, eso ya lo aprendí yo al hacer la antígua Oficialía (Formación Profesional de 3 años) hace 50 años, y aún más seguro cuando lo estañabas.
¿Es que ya no enseñan como empalmar conductores en las escuelas?
De todos modos gracias por la voluntad porque, según veo por los comentarios, ha sido util a otras personas.
Saludos.
Well my friend, you literally made me watch the whole video. Good strategy.
Stay tuned while he plugs it in.
Когда после просмотра пожалел о потраченном времени
Точно,но сука,ролик набрал 28млн.!интернациональных просмотров,как будто это одна из важнейших мировых проблем,куда катимся...
⁰
참 할일없는 인간일세! 새끼로 연습하다 실제로 하지그려!
Эти "удивительные идеи" были приведены в справочнике молодого электромонтера в начале шестидесятых годов прошлого века
Лёнь - браво! тоже просмотрел и не понял- нахыя я девять минут ЭТО смотел))
+
Тоже не понял (((( лет через 40 _удтвительное видео,шнурки можно 9пвязывать бантиком!!!!
А они теперь читать не умеют, и даже не знают, как это
During the timespan of this video, I met a girl, cooked her diner, got her pregnant, got a son, raised him as a man, sent him to college to be a electrical engineer, supported him through his first period on the job and then asked him to correctly connect my wires. He said no.
The interesting part starts at 6:15 - this video doesn't have to be so long....
thanks buddy
God bless you my patience was about to break up
And the music is about the worst you can find on planet Earth.
@@johnconway9673 Indeed! It sounds like the soundtrack to a '70s porno film (don't ask how I know).
@@marccheban194 Oh, we don't need to ask, we know how you know
Успел постареть... Такой талант, слов нет
I spent so much time here watching this and reading comments and youtube knows that.
I 2x the vid and still had time to read and write.
Oh my god, how may time I spend wating for to see the "Incredible Idea" for to connet conductors, this is something what I learn 50 years ago, in the school.
Is it that they no longer teach this in schools?
Anyway, thanks for the will because, as I see from the comments, it has been useful to other people. Greetings.
9 min video that could have easily been 1 minute. There's a thing called pacing in video, this pacing was like watching grass grow. Seriously we don't need all the trimming parts, just get to the point.
Thank you sir!
valla tomadura de pelo .eso lo sabe hasta un bebe.
Детский сад, трусы на лямках, этому нас ещё в школе учили,удивительное в этом видео только то,что такую хрень растянул на 9 минут, ТАЛАНТИЩЕ прям
Честно говоря я тоже подохренел немног, как это можно было растянуть на 10 минут)) И я бы не ставил крест на первой скрутке, в определённых ситуациях она также имеет право на существование.
мало того, у него еще и кусачки откровенно тупые, как и он сам ))))
@могила льва про количество провода, который он перевёл лучше тоже промолчать)))
9single bevael kinfe sharpening
.#mk
It's almost like watching the paint dry on the wall
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣LOL....u make my Day🌞🌞🌞
Skip until 07:25. Start watching there.
The last method, the X-twist is how I was taught to make a proper solder connection in grade school 25 yrs ago and it hasn't let me down. It prevents any hot spots in the connection where amps are being choked.
It is called a union splice and it has been in use for over 100 years.
Planes & cars or any vibrating machinery will break your solder joint at its weakest point... from solder to no solder. Never wondered why all car connections are cold clamped to their respective plugs. Well British & Australian cars are. (I should say WERE)
@@leewilkerson8185 NAH. It's a Western Union Splice -- named after the telegraph outfit that ran wire all over the U.S.A.. It HAD to be right, and fail-safe.
@@SlikLizrd, I stand corrected. Western Union splice. I read and learned about it in the 60s, so I can call it what I want now. :D You knew exactly what I meant which means you know the method. BTW, I know more about the splice itself than I know about the name which made little difference to the splices I made.
As a boy on the farm, we repaired barbed wire fencing using this method and then stretched the wire taut. The twisted wire held against the horses & cattle until the wire rusted to brittle. We also used this method for electric fencing - but I saw this video and thought you were going to show why one method of wire joining was better ELECTRICALLY from another....electric wire isn't supposed to carry heavy loads, but the high tension power lines are joined in this manner without wire nuts or junction devices.
A very long video for wires that should be current bearing, not load bearing.
Ever heard of the figure 8 knot??
Electrical,th-cam.com/video/cKZ4rdK-F38/w-d-xo.html
el que hizo este video deveria haber estudiado solo tres meses de un curso de electricidad, el empalme que usa al final tiene un nombre se llama WESTER UNION , es uno de los empalmes basicos del electricista y se hacia cuando se usaba alambre , el tema es que no necesitas en electricidad que tenga resistencia a la traccion pues seria de burrro empalmar un cable y tenderlo tirante el tema pasa por la conductividad y todos los utilizados alli cumplen ese requisito, o sea orejeras para el que hizo el video y al rincon , LO COMETO AQUI PUES NO ME PERMITEN RESPONDER EL VIDEO DIRECTAMENTE
@@washingtonbravo4741 Gracias por la información.
@Robert Shorthill do I get wasted ? sure guy, but not that much , its too labor intensive with little payback , steady as she goes , keep it fried then we can get it on, and then we can talk about this while a few good off duty fuckers making a call for it the tip, but that's before work essentially
Who else already knew how to do this but watched because the title and the picture made it seem like something miraculous?
I wish i read your comment before watching this douche twist a wire wrong two times. 😔
I think I learned this when I was 11.
@@taowizard how old u now? Have you applied it since?
Did you evenwatch the whole video?
Djdjskal😃
Mantap ini benar-benar tutorial...langsung praktek dan contoh....good 👍👍👍
ワイヤーストリッパ買う金あるなら、圧着ペンチと直線接続スリーブ買った方がいいと思います
I once learned..., methodically, you can speak about wrong methods but never show them. Something you visualize stays in the brain. Therefore always show only the proper way and leave the crap behind.
Before making the splice you must twist the strands of each wire tightly so you don't have any little wire "hairs" sticking out and then make a 90 degree bend in the stripped part before you start winding them together. Makes it much neater and more secure. THEN you solder it. This is the Western Union splice.
well in the beginning they didn't have solder and the wire was not stranded, it was solid steel wire not copper, so doing the western union splice worked just fine and the knot would never pull apart even with tension on them.
.
I've never heard it being called to Western Union Splice. But thanks for the information. I'm sure you're either Electrical Engineer or Electrical Lineman. To know the correct Terminology.
@@MarkORoth-fu2cy I'm just a jive-ass White boy from North Philly, and I learned the Western Union Splice in high-school Electric Shop. Frankford High, 1952.
@@SlikLizrd Well that is Exactly where my roots are from my Mom & Dad
10 minutes of my life that I will never get back
알고리즘이 나를 이곳에 오게 만들었지만,
한글을 알고 있는 인간이여~
칠분삼십초부터 봐라.
당신의 시간은 소중하다.
덕분에 시간 벌었어요~땡큐~
캄사..
님짱♡
이댓글을 찾았을때 이미 5분이 넘어갔다..
7:30
I was a mechanic for 20 years, then moved into the sound business for the next thirty. I doubt if I've had to connect wires like this more than half a dozen times.
How you do it?
I'll guess if I fix wires like this I lose my job 🙄
I don;t know which part of the video to watch, it's tedious but it looks like the purpose is to show the well established telephone splice. Good to see you discovered it and maybe taught others, it's the way to go when possible.
I have always called that the AT&T splice method.
Yep, Western Union splice is correct from previous comments, took awhile to recall proper name. Maybe Vikings used it too?
It's called a "western union" splice and done correctly it's almost as solid as solder
@@thisisyourcaptainspeaking2259It's the linesman's splice outside of the US, makes sense as Western Union was only in the US.
@@donkmeister I agree, it can have various names like me! :)
Классная приспособа для снятия изоляции,красиво🙋🙋🌹🌹🌈
Только и всего...................
9 minute video to give me 9 seconds of information that I’ve known since I was a kid.
nueve minutos de video para....¿no conoces las clemas?.
Absolutely right. The video is 9 minutes of bullshit if you're going to solder the joint, which is mandatory anyway, then heat shrink the joint.
7:20 / To save time, start watching at 7:20.
Nice but this is nicer
th-cam.com/video/QsFoescPz_U/w-d-xo.html
Saw this to late but bless you 😘
Молодец, хороший подход! Человек устроен именно так, что может все, абсолютно все, что нужно для его комфортного проживания. В пятом информационном уровне нашей планеты хранится вся информация, о всем, что было и может еще быть придумано человеком. Нужно только научиться, как туда войти и считать нужную информацию. Но, для этого необходимо пройти обучение в университете эволюции разума(НАУ ЭРА), где преподаватели, кандидаты и доктора наук расскажут, покажут и научат, как это сделать. Даже в сказках, былинах, мифах и поговорках такая информация дошла до нас: скатерть самобранка, сапоги скороходы, ковер самолет, лампа Алладина, шапка невидимка, молодильное яблоко и многое другое. Нам необходимо заново сесть за парты, обучиться и быстро сменить свое средневековое мировоззрение с потребительского на созидательное, что бы изменить наш мир к лучшему, сохранить его и передать нашим детям. Дверь НАУ ЭРА открыта для всех желающих.
Поддерживаю комментарий
Pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.
-Robert A. Heinlein
Человек должен уметь сменить подгузник, спланировать вторжение, зарезать свинью, управлять кораблем, спроектировать здание, написать сонет, сбалансировать счета, построить стену, поставить кость, утешать умирающих, принимать приказы, отдавать приказывать, сотрудничать, действовать в одиночку, решать уравнения, анализировать новую проблему, вносить навоз, программировать компьютер, готовить вкусную еду, эффективно бороться, храбро умереть. Специализация - насекомые.
-Роберт А. Хайнлайн
Класс...особенно про потребительское и созидательное и тут же примеры - ПРО СКАТЕРТИ САМОБРАНКИ И ТД И ТП...ну сами понимаете то ещё СОЗИДАНИЕ!!! - лентяйство Емели лежу на печи и по щючьему хотению ,СОЗИДАЮ'.
Pp9
Huyyy ..... exelente, buena idea .
Gracias por compartir
Saludos desde Medellín Colombia.
Красава, не стесняется показать рукожопство, полную безграмотность в работе и копеечный инструмент итог 19млн просмотров
Instead of showing useless methods first, you should demonstrate the correct one directly ...
Well there is six minutes I will never get back on something I already knew..
Úžasné porušovanie elektrotechnických noriem a predpisov.
Особенно понравилось пол ролика смотреть на зачистку проводов
Поставил на скорость 2,0 . Веселей пошло.
Тот кто так дергает провода вообще лучше к ним не подходить)))
И с каким трудом можно снимать изоляцию с провода, сжимая эту самую изоляцию со всей дури
Таке бажання...забрати в нього кусачки і закинути їх , щоб він їх не знайшов!
I’m shouting “I knew this when I was twelve!” and “run some solder along it!” and “Where’s the heat-shrink?”
What a waste of time!
Wow, Thanks for that. Learned that in Exploratory Week in Electrical Class in 1982. Its called a western union connection. Has been around a long time.
Yup, western union splice, learned it when I was about 5 years old from a kids book on electricity, that was around 1964. I use it all the time for not so critical stuff and cover it with marine heat shrink. It's easier than soldering or crimping when crawling around underneath a trailer and is just fine for 12 volt lights.
"Western Union" or "Lineman's" splice. Been around since the Telegraph and it wasn't even awesome back then.
Hehe... I didn't have to learn it from anyone. It's such an obvious splice that it doesn't need any training! :-D
You forgot to solder and heat shrink your lineman's splice. Also what was that crap in the middle? No one does that.
@@mathbee If a Western Union Splice is soldered in a practical application, in its intended use (one that is under motion AND tensile load) it will fail in a matter of hours due to metal fatigue.
Thank your sharing.
와우~ 정말 어마어마한기술... 10초 짜리를 10분으로... 07:25
이런 쓸데없는...조회 3천만 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
욕나옴 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ
Thank you
In short, the standard cable junction that is learned in technical school.
In practice it can't always be done.
Sometimes because we can't turn off the electricity.
Other times because there is no place to maneuver with your hands.
Well there's 9 minutes of my life I'll never get back.
That’s why TH-cam has a 2.0 speed
This why you have the option to skip along the timeline :-)
watch this smoking one cigarette... from 9 to 20 minutes of your life going away.
우와 대박이다
감사합니다
Video starts at 4:20 DONT WASTE UR TIME!!!!
你说得对
Too late !!! Wasted my time
too late 😂😂😂
My thoughts exactly.
Thanks. Some people post some shitty videos lol.
Вот это да - открытие! Я 30 лет уже так кручу, причём нигде этому не учился, сам дошёл!
Ты немного не правильно скрутку делаешь. Два провода надо распушить. Затем в распушенные проводки засунуть проводки второго провода, как пальцы в пальцы и уж после этого надо скручивать. Вот тогда никогда не распутать. (учили в школе в 1964 году).
Есть боле прочное соединение. Две полупетли заводят в узел, а уж потом крассировка
А лично я пить, курить, говорить начал ОДНОВРЕМЕННО. И никто мине не учил.
@@Vottakoj_Oleg Не ври. Тебя учил заочно Жванецкий Михаил устами Аркадия Райкина. Эту фразу придумал Жванецкий, а озвучил Райкин. А ты плагиаторщик.
@@viktorzabelin3663 Судя по тому что 30 лет крутишь, САМ, я и думал что эту фразу должен знать. Не бери в голову, будь попроще.🤭 Молодое поколение надо же учить, ты ж не снял про это видос. А книжек сейчас никто не читает. Только тик-ток, ну ютуб.
Смотрел это видео пару лет назад - запомнились только первые два способа... 😄
Последний способ хорош ... для троса буксировочного)) Чем первые два способа не устраивали автора? Незачем провода тянуть-на них что то вешать будут что ли?
@@ПавелШпетный ну например захотел на проводе повеситься а он постоянно обрывается
Thanks for showing all the different ways that fail and the one that works so we won’t repeat the same mistakes or waste the same amount of time and still be able to reconnect the broken wire together securely without other tools.
Really? And how 1) do you do that if you are joining wires that can't be rotated and 2) do you achieve a joint that won't just fall apart - without twisting the conductor strands across eachother you can't know, unless you tug on it to check, and I bet you a penny that it will fall apart when you do that. I would use that technique if I was also going to solder that joint - it would give the lowerest resistance joint - but it is mechanically too weak without solder.
Start at 4:35 if you really need this in your life..
単純に、圧着端子で
圧着しようぜ!😅
Предлагаю аффтару идею - сделай видео как закрутить саморез. Минут на 10. И обязательно тупой сорванной отверткой.
Смотреть с 7-й минуты!!!
There's 6 minutes of my life I'll never get back. Anyone who has worked with wiring knows about this.
Doogie Freckles Agreed. So glad there was the fast forward feature
hug to hug tayo sir
The GOOD WAY starts at 6:45 !
Before that 2 common but weaker way if twisting (2:00, 4:50)
@@gustavo4passos Thanks, I updated my comment.
@@alternativgazdasag cool! I'll delete mine, then.
showing of correct splicing starts at 7:16 :)
correct?
to 8:16 :)
😂 so far from correct it’s ridiculous
GOOD PROJECT
It's called a "linemans splice" been around for 100 yrs. Retired Electrician. )
but a 100years ago you couldn't make money from TH-cam 😂🤣
@@mingueyox No but you were making way above minimum wage (there wasn't one). No TV No WWW. Obvious your a younun.
9分も掛けて、なんと内容のないこと。
Símona La Cacaruza...
@@amilcarmonola1047 …ということは??
скоро ютуберы будут просто средний палец показывать 10 минут и говорить секретный способ послать кого то
Too long get to the point
I hope he realizes how much time he wasted
This has inspired me to make my own how-to video. Coming soon: how to piss without getting any on you.
Lmfao 🤣
🤣🤣🤣
insta viral on TH-cam. Can I sponsor Your vid? We're gonna make a mint!
I will be tuning in for that one
Turn your back to the wind..
Haha
Удивительно!,Мне 60,,а когда,я пошел в 5 класс,такому приему меня обучили на уроке труда
Да. И преподаватель называл последний показанный способ - "русская скрутка".
Мне 82. Это мне показывали в 1955-56. И велели не дёргать. Если хочешь дёргать - узелок нужен. Или запаять. ☺
Смотреть не стоит,достаточно посмотреть картинку. Сэкономите 9 мин. Благодарностей не надо.
Highly recommended to start watching from 06:30 but not from the beginning.
Ty so much.
Nothing beats a 120 year old plus Western Union splice!!!! Came in handy back in the day when the lines were long and large in diameter with a lot of sagging to them!!! Tim KC8SLC
То чувство, когда только купил инструмент снимающий изоляцию. Вася молодец, но надо было подробно показать все стадии покупки этого волшебного кабеля. А то, как то не полная картина...
ок мате
самое главное: как оплатил за провода-в кассе магазина или по перечислению?
@@gidovoin8149 он их покупал на рынке у перекупщиков и то часа три торговался. Уходил и снова торговался.
Я не приверженец скрутки проводов так как это ведёт к пожару.
@@manvasser8320 К пожару приводит отсутствие мозгов, а не скрутки.
the legend says he is still pulling on the cable.
It’s called a Western Union splice; it’s been around for about 150 years.
Omg im not lying fell a sleep during video, badddsdd video i learn by nature dueing this video