JRS
Major Contributor
So I have and in discussing the matter, discovered that it is not an unusual failure. That in fact, it was the most common point of failure. I know nothing of whether straight or right angled is more common. But surely a being (maybe even invoke machine learning) out there has this information and can offer some insight why it has to be so. Whether price, safety, convenience is the cause, how much more would a quality connector cost. Knowing just enough engineering to be more than dangerous, why does all that stress seems to be packed into a few mm of strain in the case of a right angled jack, but heaven knows it; its pure strain with the inline versions.
And repair? Fogettaboutit. Unless you are willing to take the time to get the needed eye transplant to even have a go at soldering a repair splice. otherwise it's breakout time
Or is it just me?
And repair? Fogettaboutit. Unless you are willing to take the time to get the needed eye transplant to even have a go at soldering a repair splice. otherwise it's breakout time
Or is it just me?