Wiring loom repairs

Phil V

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so...
Long story short, where the loom comes from the body into the tailgate, several cables have frayed to the point of broken, now as there’d needto be a certain amount of flexibility and there’s not loads of room, what’s the best option?

My favourite at this point is to replace a longer section with solder and heat shrunk wrap.

The Q&D option is bullet connectors, but I’m not sure there’s space.
 
lengthen each wire and rejoin with bullet connectors? All you need to do is crimp.
 
You may already be aware, if the section of wire near the joint needs to be flexible you should be careful to either move the joint to a place where it will not be flexed or crimp rather than solder. A solder joint will fix all the strands together, will not flex, fatigue and snap as a result. I’d be tempted to use a crimp joints and extend the wires rather than bullets, just to further reduce the risk of the connection breaking.
 
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Assuming this is a motor vehicle. You need good connection so maybe an auto electrical engineer is needed
 
I would go for replacing a longer section of the loom and use bullet connectors at both ends of the new section. We did this on a mates Astra Cabriolet as his loom had frayed and the roof not working. Might be worth making up a couple of repair sections as you will then have a spare as back up.
 
Thanks for the wisdom guys.
It looks like bullet connectors and some cable it is.

Apparently it’s a known fault I’d not known about. There’s a very serious looking rubber gaitor that completely fails to protect the wires.
 
Assuming this is a motor vehicle. You need good connection so maybe an auto electrical engineer is needed
As I misspent hundreds of hours of my youth rewiring trailers, I don’t think I need to hire in help thanks.
 
Check there isn't a recall notice on it first. You might find it should have been done FOC ages ago :)
 
Check there isn't a recall notice on it first. You might find it should have been done FOC ages ago :)
Thanks, not something I’d considered, but it’s doubtful.
 
Stagger the joins so there isn't a massive bulge where the repairs are - the bulge might not go through the hole in the panel! (Don't ask me how I discovered that... :()
If you have a real scrappy nearby, see if you can get a couple of feet of the loom that contains the same coloured wires. Makes life a lot easier!
 
I cut all the wires going through the flexible part and put joints either side of it as the remaining wires will probably break fairly soon. Solder & heatshrink on the thinner wires and bullet connector for the rear window heater wire & wiper motor under the roof lining as there was space but soldered where wires went into tailgate. There's very little free wire to pull on in the tailgate/hatch side unless you want to strip the tailgate of everything & start moving the whole loom up.


loom_1
by Darkroom48, on Flickr


loom_2
by Darkroom48, on Flickr
 
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I cut all the wires going through the flexible part and put joints either side of it as the remaining wires will probably break fairly soon. Solder & heatshrink on the thinner wires and bullet connector for the rear window heater wire & wiper motor under the roof lining as there was space but soldered where wires went into tailgate. There's very little free wire to pull on in the tailgate/hatch side unless you want to strip the tailgate everything & start moving the whole loom up.

That looks sensible, can I ask what car that was?
 
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