Recommended Posts

We keep blowing through these types of cords on the laptop and I got to trying to figure out if there was a way to reinforce these types of connectors at the break point which is marked with the arrows in the pic below?

post-160102-0-57071200-1352928229.png

I was thinking maybe heat shrink tubing might work since the last one's insulation literally broke right below the rigid connection (stress point), and cause the tiny wires to break last night. Fortunately, these are $7/each at Batteries+ so, not a big investment (gotta love the modular Laptop adapters!), but since we go through these seemingly every year or so, I want to maximize the length. I did notice (after the fact) that they have a 2 year warranty on these so will probably go that route with this one (if the receipt manages to last - it is printed in faint ink).

My wife is going to be picking up a new Laptop though next month probably for her Graduate School studies (Mine is from 2005 and still works so she uses it, but is starting to choke on today's web standards for the college and only runs XP or Linux (Forget Vista or 7 - I tried with 1gb of Ram on board). So, looking forward to reinforcing a connector like this is a good bonus! :)

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1119540-best-way-to-reinforce-connector/
Share on other sites

I think your idea with the heat shrink tubing would work well. That would reinforce it and give it another layer of protection. Maybe some electrical tape first, and then the heat shrink tubing after.

Heat shrink tubing might work, though it might just hide the problem instead of actually fixing it.

The only other idea I could think of was to MacGyver together a homebrew strain relief using a strip of elastic.

Shrink tubing is cheap and easy, so that's probably the route I'd go. Get some that's thick and sturdy.

That is a tough one. Does the connector mate with a connector that is soldered to a circuit board? Whatever you do, make sure that you aren't just transferring the strain down the connector and into the solder joints. If the strain is transferred to the solder joints the solder can crack and then you can end up with a more expensive repair (or worse, a fire).

Ideally you want the strain to be distributed across the cordage.

We don't usually pull on the wire when unplugging, just the connector at the base. If I remember correctly from cleaning the laptop internals, it has a standard DC in jack which is soldered to the system board. I have gone through a total of 2 chargers before this one for different reasons.

For the what happened to the last 2 chargers I have replaced, I replaced the tips as they snapped off oddly (OEM UNITS), but those are VERY hard to find as they are a size "N". Those however, didn't last very long and looked shoddy. So, I bought the one referenced in the link (same style at least), and have had to replace that cord instead of paying for a full charger which can be spendy.

This is the charger we are using which is why it is so modular.

What I believe happens is the cord gets bent right around that stress point (Arrow on right points to it in the first post picture), but just under, as that stress point is extremely rigid. The last one broke right under it with maybe half a mm of clearance so was unable to do a self repair of soldering.

I have thought about the heat shrink hiding any problems later down the road, so that is why I was asking since yeah, it would be an easy "fix" to cover the connector, but really - I can imagine it still not reinforcing it.

I have read about using a makeshift 'splint' to reinforce the connection, but my theory on this would be fine until you got down to the end of the splint, then you have a new weak point.

Why would I be wanting to put so much effort into a $7/cord? See the first post - Getting a brand new laptop in the very near future and am looking straight ahead at a plausible solution for that one too. :)

It's probably not from you pulling it out of your laptop, but from wrapping the cords up so tightly when you put it away.

If it were the strain relief coming out of a power brick, I would agree with you...but he is having problems at the connector. I wouldn't expect the very end piece of a tightly wound cable to receive much stress.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • I hope this encodes in to AV1 or AV2 as currently tiktok uses h265 and h264.
    • Qualcomm reportedly in talks to build custom video chips for TikTok parent ByteDance by Karthik Mudaliar Qualcomm is reportedly in advanced discussions to provide custom chip-design services to Chinese tech giant ByteDance, the same company behind TikTok. According to a report from Reuters, Qualcomm could be involved in designing custom silicon tailored for ByteDance's massive data-center workloads. If it goes through, the deal would make ByteDance one of Qualcomm's early anchor customers for its fastly growing custom chip-design division, For years, Qualcomm was the king of making smartphone processors and modems. The company has also been moving into the PC ecosystem and other formats such as on-device AI for Android XR headsets. However, this particular deal is about Qualcomm's custom Application-Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs). For a platform like TikTok, ByteDance needs hardware that can help it ingest, process, and serve billions of short-form videos daily. Generalised hardware is no longer the most cost-effective and efficient route, which is why ByteDance is trying to develop custom Video Processing Units (VPUs). VPUs designed specifically for ByteDance’s algorithmic needs could drastically reduce data-center power consumption and improve encoding speeds at an unprecedented scale. The underlying tech behind these processors is actually from Qualcomm's recent acquisition of AlphaWave Semi, a high-speed connectivity specialist company. By combining AlphaWave’s high-bandwidth IP with Qualcomm’s architectural expertise, the company could begin mass production by the end of 2026, if the talks go through. All this also comes at a time when U.S.-China tech relations have dwindled. Escalating trade frictions between Washington and Beijing have severely impacted the export of high-end AI chips from U.S. firms like Nvidia, AMD, and Lam Research. Yet, the Qualcomm-ByteDance discussions show that U.S. tech companies are still actively seeking growth avenues and are open to doing business with China, where regulators still permit. Reuters notes that the outcome of this deal could be uncertain, and ByteDance might also seek partners other than Qualcomm. via Reuters | Image via DepositPhotos.com
    • Look who's back!
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      DaviKar went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Dedicated
      HidekoYamamoto94 earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Month Later
      timbobit earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      456
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      164
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      117
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      83
    5. 5
      Xenon
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!