They must be available because I saw someone using one on the facebook short video and it was clearly not home made.
I must not be using the correct search term.
They must be available because I saw someone using one on the facebook short video and it was clearly not home made.
I must not be using the correct search term.
snipped-for-privacy@ccanoemail.com wrote on 1/24/2023 1:41 PM:
He wants to buy something, instead of make something. A SIM tray pin is perfect for unlocking zip ties.
Most of the SIM tray pins are very hard metal and the pin is narrow and flat. I have two that came with my two cellphones. Both pins are different in shape but they don't bend easily.
Yep - thanks for the tip - it looks easier to hold onto
- for the task - than a jewellers screwdriver. John T.
I know that it is buyable, I saw it on the facebook video.
Nope, much too thin.
I dislike re-using cable ties especially when they need to be really tight. The nylon stretches & weakens.
Most are cheap chinese plastic.
Don't most people pull then through to get a tight fit and then cut off the excess length for neatness? It's probably impossible to reuse the ties once they have been cut to length.
It is better to reuse the same cable tie if you just want to replace one of the wires in the bundle. The original cable tie is already the most suitable size for the job. Or, if you are repairing equipment, you might not havecable tie of similar size.
Zip ties are about 1€ (~US $1) for a hundred, if bought in packs of 100, less in larger amounts.
The only excuse to reuse one is if one doesn't have a matching one to hand...
Thomas Prufer
It's usefult to re-use when used as temporary ties and repeatedly opened and closed - such as running a number of cables along a route and adding each one to the bundle as you go ... otherwise you end up with cutting a tie every few feet and fitting a new one, which leaves a lot of scrap ties to collect up and throw away and can take some time and effort to thread the new tie behind the bundle of cables and through the fixing point.
If the origional was pulled tight and cut off like many are I would like to see someone put it back on. Many times they are put on with a tool that tightens them up and cuts off the end flush.
More usual for the end to be hacked off with a blunt pair of scissors leaving a razor-sharp end /just/ long enough to cut clean through your skin ...
You can leave the tail end alone if you do it yourself, especially if you use cable tie of appropriate size for the job.
Assuming you're planning on adding to the cable bundle like in the usual computer workstation rat's nest, those Velcro ties are the cat's nuts.
I've got an antique T&B Ty-Rap gun from my panel building days. They were very handy. Put the ties on the harness and then tighten them with the gun. You could set the tension for the tie size and it would cut the tail off flush. It was a one-handed operation so you didn't need to screw around holding the head, pulling the tail with a pair of needle nose pliers, and then snipping the tail off with micro-shears.
All true... however, IME, a cable tie that is tight and trimmed can't be reused in that spot. No way to get it closed again, even assuming that the tied bunch of cables doesn't get larger. Two workarounds: either wrap the cable tie twice around, and use a single wrap when reusing. Or cut the tie so that most of the tail remains, and reuse where a shorter tie works.
OTOH, for holding cables together while adding, routing and removing cables, I'd go for a different solution. Velcro, twist of copper wire, something like that.
And for a plastic-free solution:
Thomas Prufer
Thomas Prufer wrote on 1/26/2023 2:13 AM:
Deliberately leaving strips of copper wires all over the place amongst electronic and electrical equipment is not a good idea.
I have a cable tie gun but it's more trouble than its worth. Quicker & easier to do it by hand.
In that case you would either install or replace with ties that are designed to be re-usable.
That's commercial use rather than domestic. Speed trumps costs.
If anyone remembers how to lace a harness...
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