Reply to Shorten your RCA cables to avoid clutter

Shorten your RCA cables to avoid clutter
Disclaimer: This tutorial assumes you know how to work a solder iron.
Note: "Tinning" is when you apply a small amount of solder to make it easier to join the wire to the metal.

The photo size is rather large so you have a very clear image to compare to.


The reason I am writing this tutorial is simple. I have an 8 foot length of RCA cable and only need 6 inches of it. The rest ends up tangled, and I've noticed some distortion. So I went out and picked up 8 RCA connectors, and went to work.


Step 1: Cut your cable to the length you need. Mine had a plastic square at each end to prevent splitting the wire all the way, so I used those as the centres.


Step 2: strip the outside off of the wire. This will expose a central wrapped wire, and a lot of thinner wires all the way around. Pull the outer wires to one side, and twist them up.


Step 3: Strip the inner wire, but leave it slightly longer than the coating on the outside of the whole chord. This central wire will be your signal wire, and the outside one you twisted is your ground.


Step 4: Do the same thing to the other 4 ends of the cable.


Step5: "Tin" the ground wire with a small amount of solder. Don't use too much, or the wire won't fit in the ground hole on the connector. "Tin" the signal wire as well.


Step 6: Rinse and repeat with the other 4 ends.



Step 7: take your connector and remove the outer shield. Connectors all look a little different here, but the next few steps are generally the same. You will have on the end that plugs in, a channel down the middle, and a metal ground with a hole in it, as well as 2 metal clamps which will hold the cable in place.


Step 8: "Tin" the centre channel. This is where your signal wire will go.


Step 9:
***MOST IMPORTANT STEP***
Slide the outer shield and spring, if you have one, over the chord you are attaching the connector to. DO NOT forget this step. I assure you, once you have soldered a beautiful connection and realise the shield is not on the chord, this project become less fun.


Step 10: spread open the metal clamps on the connector, and feed the ground wire through the hole. Pull it all the way down so that the signal wire is almost touching the centre channel.


Step 11: Solder the signal wire to the centre channel. Make sure you don't keep the solder iron here too long, or you will melt the plastic inside the connector and will end up with a loose connection.


Step 12: Bend the ground wire back towards the cable, and solder it in place. The solder, combined with the bend in the ground wire and the metal clamps will keep your whole connector from ripping apart when you unplug it.


Step 13: Bend the metal clamps around the cable to secure everything together, and slide the shield up, and screw it all together.


Step 14: rewind, and do the other 4.


The new shorter cables sound just as good, if not better than the long ones. Everything is just al little neater now.
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