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tight around the joint within half a minute. If you overheat the tubing, it may shrink so much that it splits, at which point you must remove it and start over. As soon as the tubing is tight around the wire, your job is done, and thereโ€™s no point in making it any hotter. Figures 3-48 through 3-50 show the desired result. I used white tubing because it shows up well in photographs. Different colors of heat-shrink tubing all perform the same way.

Figure 3-48. Slip the tubing over your wire joint.

Figure 3-49. Apply heat to the tubing.

Figure 3-50. Leave the heat on the tubing until it shrinks to firmly cover the joint.

I suggest you next practice your soldering skills on a couple of practical projects. In the first one, you can add color-coded, solid-core wires to your AC adapter, and in the second one, you can shorten the power cord for a laptop power supply. You can use your larger soldering iron for both of these tasks, because neither of them involves any heat-sensitive components.

Modifying an AC Adapter

In the previous chapter, I mentioned the irritation of being unable to push the wires from your AC adapter into the holes of your breadboard. So, letโ€™s fix this right now:

1. Cut two pieces of solid-conductor 22-gauge wireโ€”one of them red, the other black or blue. Each should be about 2 inches long. Strip a quarter-inch of insulation from both ends of each piece of wire.

2. Trim the wire from your AC adapter. You need to expose some fresh, clean copper to maximize your chance of getting the solder to stick.

I suggest that you make one conductor longer than the other to minimize the chance of the bare ends touching and creating a short circuit. Use your meter, set to DC volts, if you have any doubt about which conductor is positive.

Solder the wires and add heat-shrink tubing as you did in the practice session. The result should look like Figure 3-51.

Figure 3-51. Solid-core color-coded wires, soldered onto the wires from an AC adapter, provide a convenient way to feed power to a breadboard. Note that the wires are of differing lengths to reduce the risk of them touching each other.

Shortening a Power Cord

When I travel, I like to minimize everything. It always annoys me that the power cord for the power supply of my laptop is 4 feet long. The thinner wire that connects the power supply to the computer is also 4 feet long, and I just donโ€™t need that much wire.

After searching exhaustively I couldnโ€™t find any laptop power cables shorter than 3 feet, so I decided to shorten one myself. If you feel no need to do this, you should try the following procedure on an old extension cord, just as an exercise. You do need to go through these steps to acquire some practice in soldering heavier, stranded wire and using heat-shrink tubing:

1. Use your wire cutters to chop the wire, and then a utility knife to split the two conductors, with one shorter than the other. When splicing a power cord or similar cable containing two or more conductors, itโ€™s good to avoid having the joints opposite each other. They fit more snugly if they are offset, and thereโ€™s less risk of a short circuit if a joint fails.

Figure 3-52.

Figure 3-53.

Figure 3-54.

Figure 3-55.

Figure 3-56.

Figure 3-57.

2. Strip off a minimal amount of insulation. One-eighth of an inch (3 mm) is sufficient. The automatic wire strippers that I mentioned in the shopping list in Chapter 1 are especially convenient, but regular wire strippers will do the job.

3. Cut two pieces of heat-shrink tubing, each 1 inch long, big enough to slide over the separate conductors in your cable. Cut a separate 2-inch piece of larger tubing that will slide over the entire joint when itโ€™s done. The steps described so far are illustrated in Figures 3-52 through 3-58.

Figure 3-58. Figures 3-52 through 3-58 illustrate the sequence of steps to prepare for making a shortened power cord for a laptop computer power supply.

4. Now for the most difficult part: activating your human memory. You have to remember to slide the tubing onto the wire before you make your solder joint, because the plugs on the ends of the wires will prevent you from adding any heat-shrink tubing later. If youโ€™re as impatient as I am, itโ€™s very difficult to remember to do this every time.

5. Use your helping hand to align the first joint. Push the two pieces of wire together so that the strands intermingle, and then squeeze them tight between finger and thumb, so that there are no little bits sticking out. A stray strand of wire can puncture heat-shrink tubing when the tubing is hot and soft and is shrinking around the joint.

6. The wire that youโ€™re joining is much heavier than the 22-gauge wire that you worked with previously, so it will suck up more heat, and you must touch the soldering iron to it for a longer time. Make sure that the solder flows all the way into the joint, and check the underside after the joint is cool. Most likely youโ€™ll find some bare copper strands there. The joint should become a nice solid, rounded, shiny blob. Keep the heat-shrink tubing as far away from the joint as possible while youโ€™re using the soldering iron, so that heat from the iron doesnโ€™t shrink the tubing prematurely, preventing you from sliding it over the joint later.

Figure 3-59.

Figure 3-60.

Figure 3-61.

Figure 3-62.

Figure 3-63.

Figure 3-64.

7. When the joint has cooled, slide the heat-shrink tubing over it, and apply the heat gun. Now repeat the process with the other conductor. Finally, slide the larger piece of tubing over the joint. You did remember to put the large tubing onto the wire at

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