Am_Fet scribbles:
Found this on the Interweb Thursday on Makezine (actually linked from an Analog Synth forum I'm a member of).
How-To: Splice Wire to NASA Standards
Some commenters on Friday’s post about using a washer as a soldering aid noticed my sloppy splicing technique and were kind enough to educate me about the so-called “Western Union splice,” aka the “Lineman’s splice,” which is the preferred method for twisting solid-core wire leads together for inline electrical connections.
Developed during the heydey of the telegraph, the Lineman’s splice is designed for connections that will be under tension. It is commonly claimed that, properly made, a Lineman’s splice is stronger than the wires of which it is composed. In any case, it is a time-proven method, and, coolest of all, one of NASA’s Required Workmanship Standards. To wit, in a NASA-approved Lineman’s splice:
- The conductors shall be pre-tinned.
- There shall be at least 3 turns around each conductor and the wraps shall be tight with no gaps between adjacent turns.
- The wraps shall not overlap and the ends of the wrap shall be trimmed flush prior to soldering to prevent protruding ends.
- Conductors shall not overlap the insulation of the other wire.
Though the Lineman’s splice was originally used without solder, today soldering is common. And NASA insists on it:
- Solder shall wet all elements of the connection.
- The solder shall fillet between connection elements over the complete periphery
of the connection.
This material comes from page 84 of NASA-STD 8739.4, which is a great reference if you’re interested in best practices for interconnecting cables and wires. [Thanks, Alex Barclay!]
3 comments:
As an ex-NZPO/Telecom switching technician, that was actually quite fascinating. Serious stff! We used to do all that stuff in exchange and PABX installs. Useful for train layouts I thort - SteveF
what? so my leaning under the layout, arranging two shiny wire end bits to vaguely align, and touch them with soldering iron and a bit of resin cored solder not good enough?? My layout isnt intended to go into orbit... but you never know. Interesting stuff.
Quentin
But imagine the awed looks of spectators when you divulge "...and its wired up to Nasa standards!"
Hell, I'd be impressed!!
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