Take your crimping tool and use it to strip off around 2-3 inches of the outer jacket from each end of the cable. The crimping tool will have a section with a razor blade and enough clearance to cut through the jacket but not the wires on the inside. Place the cable in this slot, ...
If you remember thecrimped hair trend from the 1980s, hold on with skipping this tip. There is a new effective way to use the same crimping technique to add volume to your hair. I recently testedVoloom’s hair lifting tool Rootie. It crimps the roots of the under-layers of the hair ...
You do not need to hold the side strand, to which you will add new hair from the sides; you can let it fall and blend with the rest of your hair. Thus, use your thumb as a tail comb to separate an even chunk from the side to add it to your braid. Let it rest in your fist...
If you can afford to use these connectors, you’ll also be able to afford to buy the appropriate tools to crimp them, even if only second hand – they arewell worth it. I have confirmed six types: HT-95 (AWG 22-32): The current and most commonly used Mini-PV tool. It’s large ...
Sometimes I use it to bend my hair Lucy Hale-style and other days I go for a full messy wave. For day two of my challenge, I chose a full curl with straightened ends (my trick for keeping my lob from looking mom). Per usual, my flat iron is my fave tool. I can customize my...
If your digitizer will not respond to touch at all, reattempt the repair, and make certain your cable was not crimped (folded too much). Crimping causes micro fractures in the thin metal inside a flex cable. Once this metal is cracked, power and other impulses cannot flow through the devi...
Then, weave the wire back through the crimp bead to create a loop. Squeeze the crimp bead with a crimper tool or needle nose pliers to flatten it in place and be a “knot.”[11] Tug on the wire before crimping to make the loop around the clasp tighter. The tighter the loop, the...
Place one end of the crimp connector into one of these channels, then press down hard on the tool to crimp the connector onto the wire. Do the same on the other side of the connector. Crimping the connector will lock it onto the wire, creating a permanent splice. Don't use pliers ...