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.
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...
That gets tedious when you're building harnesses with hundreds of ties.
We used something similar in the military, or I should say we had such a tool in every toolbox. It was usually much faster to grab the tail with a pair of pliers, give it a yank to cinch it up, then either tape the tail or snip it with dykes. As others have said, a snipped tail can be very sharp.
... or remembers how the lace breaks on the next-to-last knot...
Thomas Prufer
Back in the '70s we got a contract for airport ALS (rabbit) controllers. At the time the FAA didn't approve of those new-fangled nylon ties and everything had to be laced.
Luckily most of the workers were women and they took it in stride as another macrame project.
But a lot more convenient to you as you don't have the right tool
But I am trying to get the right tool because I saw that they are available when one was used in a video short.
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