Comments 26 to 36 of 36

Quote unrealhippie 13th July 2005, 12:29
Unless I missed it, you failed to mention that spiral wrap doesnt bend very easily (or if you do, it all splits up)

Also didnt really highlight the fact braiding is very flexible.

Fans - braided
PSU - not braided, but some parts are braided (bought that way.. Tagan :D)
Spirial wrap - just because I couldnt be arsed to braid :P

My PC:
http://img39.echo.cx/my.php?image=pc11su.jpg

http://img39.echo.cx/my.php?image=pc20fq.jpg

http://img39.echo.cx/my.php?image=pc30vg.jpg

http://img39.echo.cx/my.php?image=pc54ao.jpg
Quote Bindibadgi 13th July 2005, 13:56
Spiral wrap is incredibly flexible, and the whole point is that it splits up - just depends how you use it.
I also think you could see from the pictures and use your own judgement about them.
Quote cpu121 13th July 2005, 15:06
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stephen Brooks
I liked this article. Made me want to apply split loom to something ;)

Unfortunately the most annoying wire for me is outside the case and it's the 4m-long headphone lead, which is great when you want to be over the other side of the room without strangling yourself, but is really bad when there's a messy knot of wire on the floor that gets involved with your chair. What is needed is a retractable spool of wire like a tapemeasure, but I don't know if those exist...

This willl sound fairly daft but have you ever thought about using one of those extendable dog leads? Tie the lead to the point that the cable for the headphone is usually folded up to then when you move away the lead can move freely but if you let it go it returns back to where it normally is when you're at your desk etc?
Quote Stephen Brooks 15th July 2005, 02:43
I'll have to get hold of a cheap dog lead/retractable key chain and try some stuff. I reckon if I were to actually take the chain out and replace it by the headphone lead, *doubled back and starting from its midpoint* it might be able to unroll symmetrically. But no idea if that will work in practice...
Quote Vito 15th July 2005, 11:59
The article is ok. But I think it would have been better to show some of the magnificent braiding jobs we have seen in these forums.
Quote Stephen Brooks 15th July 2005, 21:16
Quote:
Originally Posted by cpu121
This willl sound fairly daft but have you ever thought about using one of those extendable dog leads?
Or, better:
http://stephenbrooks.org/odd/retractable1.jpghttp://stephenbrooks.org/odd/retractable2.jpg
http://stephenbrooks.org/odd/retractable3.jpg

The clothes line is cheap and so badly-made I pulled it apart with my hands and the tacks holding it together popped off. Then I cut off most of the clothes line, leaving about 25cm left, tied that to the middle of my headphone cord (with a reef knot - had to Google for that with one hand while holding the wound-up thing with the other). I think I went a bit mad on the pre-winding, though, as the thing almost tries to climb up its own cord. I'll have to re-do it later. Note I had to re-attach the metal thingy that used to be on the end of the line to the headphone jack so it doesn't disappear in.
Quote Highland3r 16th July 2005, 00:13
Ebuyer (UK and probably US) do cheap sleeving kits, under a tenner iirc. You get all the braid, heatshrink, some zip ties and a molex/ATX connector removal tools too.
Bargainous!
Quote Abug 19th July 2005, 01:35
Hey guys
You missed another method in your article. A cheap one too.

Grab some ELECTRICAL TAPE and start at one end of the cable and wrap it round until you reach the end like the molex plug, and then cut it and start again til you have done it all. Personally I prefer black electrical tape when I do this method.
Once done cables can easily be bunched together and routed to where you want them to go, and with black cable ties (or as some ppl call em -ZIP TIES), they can be finally held together and cable tied out of the way. If your case is dark, you virtually don't see the cables.
;)
Quote cpu121 19th July 2005, 13:12
Ikea also do boxes that come with cable ties, velcro straps, etc for £1.99.
Quote ch424 21st July 2005, 20:26
Nice guide!

Two things you missed though: Cable folding and masking tape! Ok, it looks pants, but if you don't have a case window, and are just worried about airflow, that's fine:
http://img180.imageshack.us/my.php?image=image0034bt.jpghttp://img180.imageshack.us/my.php?image=image0041jq.jpghttp://img176.imageshack.us/my.php?image=image0058wb.jpg


Also, see that green cable tie in the second pic? That's a useful trick for making stubborn bundles of cables stay in their right place: bend them into the right shape, then put on a cable tie really tight.


ch424
Quote Flibblebot 22nd July 2005, 09:58
Quote:
Originally Posted by The_Pope
OK, so the official conversion rate is USD$1.80 to GBP£1.00 but because of economies of scale (the US is like 5 times the population of Britain), shipping costs, local taxes (VAT is 17.5% on everything) etc it means that often when you ignore the currency, the numbers are very similar. Hence $1 = £1.

Overall, Britain is a very expensive country to live in, and most of the US is relatively cheap. So if you're talking about a sheet of plywood from Home Depot, that might cost 5 bucks but be more like 5 quid in England.
Actually, I think the UK is in the top 5 for cost of living - not far from countries like Switzerland or Japan.
There's a very interesting article in the current PCPro (Sept 05 issue), that says while there are things like economies of scale that inflate the price compared to the US market, they don't come close to accounting for the almost doubling in price. The least understandable is the cost of downloadable software, where there aren't things like manufacturing costs - but companies still charge different prices in different countries. Another example is the price that Apple charges per download on iTunes - they've not come up with a sensible reason why we should be charged more than the rest of Europe...

I'll get off my soapbox now
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