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I would run a length of heat-shrink sleeve over the damaged areas and shrink it with a heat gun.
But these things aren't built to last.
May be time for a new set.
Err, ...on my earphones the plug end is much much smaller than the earphones end.......!Surely the sleeve will have to be large enough to slide over the earphones?
Do some heat shrink sleeves have a greater degree of potential shrinkage?
Err, ...on my earphones the plug end is much much smaller than the earphones end.......!
yes. A new pair then...Fair play, but that would mean that the OP needs to bond both the left and right cables together. I am guessing that he might not want to limit the degree to which they branch off.
There is certainly variation. 2:1 is the cheap and nasty default, 3:1 and 4:1 are quite common.Do some heat shrink sleeves have a greater degree of potential shrinkage?
Headphones sometimes use what is known as "tinsel wire". This uses a textile core with metal foil conductors. Tinsel wire has advantages in terms of flexibility and durability under repeated bending.
Unfortunately such wire is not friendly to repair. Stripping it without damaging the foil is hard, and then soldering destroys the textile core making the wire extremely fragile. Manufacturers use special crimps to avoid the need to strip and solder, but that doesn't really help the repair guy.
As mentioned, hot melt glue over the area, once it has started to go from clear to whiteish start rolling it with your palm (wear gloves) so that your rolling a sausage shape, perhaps do it on some greaseproof paper etc. then roll that over in order to roll it all.
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