Is this even possible?
I have a small ribbon cable that has a few traces cut in an automotive radio. I know a replacement is out of the question. It must flex because the face on the radio is motorized.
Thanks for any info on patching this to get it working again.
Patching Ribbon Cable
http://vincentroberts.com/images/IMG_0680.jpg
http://vincentroberts.com/images/IMG_0681.jpg
I don't know if that will help any. Pitch looks to be around 1mm.
The cable is 12cm long until it enters the radio face. I haven't pulled that apart yet, so i'll have to see how it's connected in there.
http://vincentroberts.com/images/IMG_0681.jpg
I don't know if that will help any. Pitch looks to be around 1mm.
The cable is 12cm long until it enters the radio face. I haven't pulled that apart yet, so i'll have to see how it's connected in there.
There are (unless they have been discontinued) several conductiive paints made for printed circuit repair. GC Electronics makes a silver based paint, and there may be less expensive versions using copper or nickel. The main advantage of a conductive paint is that it is less likely to damage the cable than attempting to solder to the conductors. Molton solder tends to dissolve copper and silver, so the cable conductors may simply disappear if you try to solder to them.
The paint may not be flexible enough if the breaks are in an area that is continually flexed. It might be possible to use a thin strand of wire to bridge the gap, using the paint to make a conductive contact at each end.
There are also conductive epoxy formulations available. These will probably adhere better and may be useful for bridging hairline cracks without making the cable much stiffer.
The paint may not be flexible enough if the breaks are in an area that is continually flexed. It might be possible to use a thin strand of wire to bridge the gap, using the paint to make a conductive contact at each end.
There are also conductive epoxy formulations available. These will probably adhere better and may be useful for bridging hairline cracks without making the cable much stiffer.
Imagine you took a pair of scissors and cut three leads directly perpendicular to their direction. It's a real clean break...there's nothing missing. If I align the two together, they're touching.
I guess taking pics of the break would have been a good idea.
I'll get some in a little while.
The conductive epoxy may work, but it sure isn't cheap from what I'm seeing.
Thanks
I guess taking pics of the break would have been a good idea.
I'll get some in a little while.
The conductive epoxy may work, but it sure isn't cheap from what I'm seeing.
Thanks
actually, it's not a flat cable but a flexcircuit. I think you could just scrape 1/4" of the solder mask (?) off each side of the cut and solder some very light ga wire. I'd be very carefull and solder it very quickly. depending on the cut, you may be able to solder the ends of the wires together. Maybe use a hot air gun to pre-heat it,. Use some electrical tape to insulate it. You might temperature test on an non-critical section.
- Chris Smith
- Posts: 4325
- Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2001 1:01 am
- Location: Bieber Ca.
Hello,
Ive done a repair on computer hard disk ribbon cable.
Strip the insulation back a little, bridge with wire, solder.
Electrical tape over the repair.
Worked fine, but this didnt have to flex that much.
Take care,
Al
PS wow this font sure is small when typing the reply.[/code]
Ive done a repair on computer hard disk ribbon cable.
Strip the insulation back a little, bridge with wire, solder.
Electrical tape over the repair.
Worked fine, but this didnt have to flex that much.
Take care,
Al
PS wow this font sure is small when typing the reply.
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