treadwell wrote: |
absolutely top notch, Jean!!!-- a very clean and meticulous looking build-- the tow cable looks awsome!! could you elaborate on how you made it or tell me what issue you had your cable details published in??-- excellent work dude!!-- thanks --- tread |
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Thanks Tread! It was in the last November issue. But let me get into more details here I took some cable that is used to hook up stereo speakers. There should be 8 tiny brands twisted in 2 goups of 4, running side by side. I took a bit longer than what I needed, and stripped the insulation. That's the tricky part as these individual brands are really fragile, and if one is slightly damaged, it will snap later. I then tried to separate each of them as best as possible. After this, I took 2 pairs of small locking pliers. I clamped down both end, making sure the brands are side by side, as close a possible to each other. I then started to twist one end until it looked like I wanted, trying to keep a constant tension.
I noticed that by varying the tension when you twist, it gives different results
I made the end clasp by forming the loop with the help of a drill bit, folding the cable back to were I wanted the steel thingy (on a real one) to end. I glued it together a this point. I made the renforcement steel points in the loop by cutting a strip of aluminum foil of the desired width. Not the foil that is use to cover food, but more like the one for a pizza. I used the drill bit again.
The steel thingy was made from a band of the same aluminum foil, slightly longer than the perimeter of the surface to wrap. I then used my drill index, again , to bring it to the best tight fit as possible. The rest is just a matter of sliding it into place, rolling it in on itself and shape it to the desired form.
I will probably go in the techniques section and start a tread to share the knowledge