This is a good video but they forgot to mention a fundamental point. When you strip your cables you will essentially be left with four wires (for a set of standard headphones without a mic). Before burning off the coating cut your red 'pair' a little bit shorter so that you know which is which. The two uncoloured wires are grounds and will eventually be soldered to the gold leg. It makes it easier to burn the grounds first so that you can twist them together ready to be soldered onto the gold leg. Then burn the coloured wires and then length of the wire will let you know which is red and which is green. I originally burnt my wires and twisted the red with its ground and did the same with the green and had little to no sound which is probably what a lot of people here are finding. Hope this helps 👍
oh wow, didn't realize it was this simple. I have a headset with a broken jack sitting in my drawer for over 4 years now. There was this white fiber type thing inside with the different wires. This video has inspired me to attempt to repair it once more!
@@lukeskywalker6755 Except that shit never seems to do anything other than get in the way of fixing broken wires or intimidating newbies away from trying to self-repair.
Guys, I, while living, have achieved greatness at fixing headphones. Advice: after soldering & testing, REINFORCE the place where wire attaches to the plug! How? Superglue/liquid cement. Those glues are runny when you squeeze them out of the tube, but after a few minutes become gooey and like spiderweb. USE that 'spiderweb'. Wrap it around the spot you soldered plus half an inch onto the wire (many layers, generously). Before that (before even soldering, put a spring from a pen onto the wire. Once first batch of 'spiderweb' solidifies, pull (screw) the pen spring onto the spot and add more spiderweb. Wait 24 hours for joint to become hard as a rock, slap some black insulating tape of shrink tubing on top - the end. You get headphone jack that NEVER breaks off.
Felmea Mercado u should test them using yr phone Keep changing the spots of the wires till u hear good and correctly then solder them and add super glue and tape and u are all ready to go :D
Gday. Why is it 99% of ALL headphone repair videos lacking the wiring information to connect the wires on the EAR BUDS , they all spend time at the end that connects to the source, but no video shows the wires from each ear bud, espically for studio headphones
@@guineapig55555 Which is exactly why there should be more videos on it. No one needs a bunch of videos on simple shit. That's like looking up videos on math an having 10,000 on addition and two on calculus. We don't need this many videos on the same simple thing.
@@pavmx703 Totally agree. I'm looking for resources on how to wire up a total cable replacement for headphones, and where to buy the parts to do so. Really would like to do an all-around upgrade the quality of the cables from stock/oem.
its easier than to replace the jack you just replace the cable up to the speakers each speakers is marked with - + brown its the ground and red is R green L
The burned enamel residue and, if you burn for a long time, the copper oxide are very good insulators AND very good at preventing solder adhesion. It's therefore best to GENTLY use some fine grit sandpaper to remove it. Either press the wires gently onto the sandpaper and drag OR fold the sandpaper over the wires and pull. Try to rotate the wires between swipes to expose as much copper as possible. Be gentle!
The tip about using a lighter to burn the coatings is very useful, thank you. I just cut a different cable with a good jack and tied the wires together - no soldering :)
As far as standards, I was repairing my headphones with a 3.5mm connector that had some pre-cut wire on it. (The headphones had a short cable that I didn't want to make any shorter.) The headphones had red, white, and green and the replacement connector had red white and black. I ended up doing some research to see what wires did what depending on the wiring scheme.
People, after years of experimenting, I have finally found the BEST way to solder these tiny headphone wires 1)Firstly strip the plastic wire housing. 2) Next apply PAINT THINNER on each of the tiny wires. Wait for it to dry(2 mins). 3) Then grab a soldering iron, put some solder on it, and run the tip of the iron through the wire in a DOWNWARDS DIRECTION -the wire should start bubbling - this actually gets rid of the enamel coating as it sticks to the solder. Let this solder drip on the table/remove this solder. (If you use lighter to burn the enamel, you don’t actually remove the enamel - you just melt it, which is why people find it so hard to solder these wires. ) Now, you have actually REMOVED and TINNED the wire (which is impossible if you use fire to melt the enamel) At this stage you just need to connect the tinned wires together and solder.
For those that have the Steel Series Arctis with their proprietary cable and random disconnects, audio only on one side or phone adapter not working without fiddling with the cable you can take a hammer and tap lightly the tip of the male connector (not the jack, their weird usb like cable) so that when you insert it in the female connector the metal housing pushes the contacts properly. This is how I fixed mine.
It would be helpful if you labeled your video to include the word jack since you actually fix the jack and not the cable. I happened to come across this, thank God, as it was just what I needed. Great instruction, very detailed and easy to follow.
One time I was fixing my good old Philips she9000 then I finished soldering I realized I didn't put the plug cover on the cable before. ALL OF MY HATE.
If anyone one wants to find this plug just search "DIY 3.5mm (1/8") stereo Headphone Jack". I was researching for a bit and this seems to get the most results for this plug. There are also screw types of this plug where you don't need a soldering iron, you just need a small long screw driver, wire strippers, and a lighter to burn off the enamel. I see all the comments of people complaining about the price and burning their fingers; they should have spent 20 minutes researching or reading comments before hand.
My giant over-ear headphones with 50mm drivers had an inline mic, but all the headphone wires went through the mic's circuit board, and the wire for the left channel broke off the circuit board. After a few hours of trying to solder the tiniest wire to a circuit board, I gave up, desoldered all the wires, chucked the circuit board into my parts bin, and just directly soldered all the speaker wires to one another. It works wonderfully now! I did that 2 years ago and it is still holding up to this very day. however, by doing that, they don't have a mic anymore, but the mic was crap anyways so I didn't really care. Sadly, I might have to get new ones as the plastic diaphragm is starting to get crinkly and whenever I put it to max volume, I get terrible distortion as a result (it gets unbearably loud for me, and I always listen on medium volume). On medium volume though, it still works wonderfully. Also, they sound way better than beats and I got them for about 50 bucks 3-4 years ago. (if you are curious, the model # is JVC HA-MR55X). Ah, isn't diy fun?
Thanks guys - gonna give this a shot. Now have - count them - 3 broken headphones and I'LL BE DAMNED IF I'LL BUY ANOTHER SET UNTIL I FIX AT LEAST ONE OF THESE!
Thank the heavens I found this! I just got new headphone yesterday, good ones too, and they are already broken. I'm gonna do this soon so I can get back to what I was going to do.
patrick norton oh I know that thing, I just didn't know it had a special name (I thought it was just "rubber" :D), and I didn't know you could easily apply it on something at your home/garage, I thought it was a very industrial process, interesting :) (also thanks for being awesome and replying to me :D)
I don't get how your videos arnt reaching a huge audience? The content on your channel is so useful in day to day life with home DIY and repairs that you should be getting more popular each day! *I guess thats just a short wait till you 2 are famous ;)*
Thanks, you can help spread the word! Tell your friends and family about the show...sharing links on social media really does help introduce the show to new viewers.
+DIY Tryin my earphones have a mic(trrs) but the jack broke, can i use a TRS jack replacement instead? dont care if the microphone doesnt work anymore, just want music lol
What soldering iron model do you recommend? Or, at least, what minimum wattage? And I notice you use a tip with a fine point instead of a flat head -- does that help keep the tip hotter? Also, do you use solder with or without lead in it? I know the non-leaded kind is safer/healthier, but for the life of me, I cannot get it to melt and work, so I just resort to the leaded kind. What do you use? I would love it if you guys would do a short vid just on soldering and soldering irons (I did not see in your video list but I might be blind). Thanks for the tip today! I am running out to my Radio Shack (the last one remaining in my area before they go the way of the carrier pidgeon) to pick up a 1/8" jack and do it!
non-leaded seems to need more heat. I modify airsoft toys so I've got a bit of experience when the leaded wasn't available, I too had a bunch of problems getting it both to get hot enough to melt and stay that hot long enough to get whatever I was doing done.
Bingo, tried to fix my Sennheisers by just replacing the bad end that plugs into the headphone with another one from a previous cable that also had one go bad. I tried just twisting the bare wires together to see if that would work and was surprised when no sound came out at all. I didn't realize they had a coating on them, just assumed the color was anodized. Now I got it working just like new, thanks for saving me $20.
Man I’ve wiggled mine so much both ends are unwired and tapped up but hopefully this will help. I sooo am afraid 😱 to do the example your showing. I’ve been shocked one to many times. Thanks was helpful still.
Here's an idea... I had 2 car chargers for my note 3 and the micro usb end was not working. I soldered a new micro usb port on and now they work! Easy project that will make a lot of people happy!
In case anyone wondered, the big one is the ground and for the brown cable(there could be 2 brown cables for mic ones), where do i connect the red, blue and green ones?, well there are 3 smaller pins, left one for blue, middle one for green (microphone) and right one for the red cable.
Thanks! I had a cable/soldering lose inside my k701 and didn't know how to take them apart so I could fix them. Thanks to your video I have yet again working headphones.
+MyWillyboi hey don't think it has anything to with a "UA-cam policy". Curators can choose to monetize their content with ads, and therefore earn money.
The most important task of the whole performance.....building / buying contraption with alligator clip to stabilize space to enable iron, solder and wires to come together if doing this alone without a buddy to help.
The joke is funny no matter how many times you all keep posting it. Do you look up how to fix a broken cell phone screen while surfing on your broken cell phone ? Besides who the fuck doesn't have some speakers ?
For anybody installing a 3.5mm male jack for an iambic paddle, the tip is for dit, the second ring is for dah, the base is the ground. I use old phone cord. It's durable and cheap or even free sometimes. The jacks are about $2 ea., Radio Shack or online.Use rosin core solder, of course.
Ok, for people who have headphones with mic usually blue and green wire are + for the 2 headphones and red and gold twisted together is - for the headphones, separate clear red and clear gold are + and - for the mic, I find it easier than soldering to cut off the wire and connect to another wire with good plug.
What's the point of buying a new wire if the original wire is SOLDERED TO THE HEADPHONES in the first place. You can't just rip it out and expect to find a 3,5mm jack underneath it. To fix non-modular headphones, you have to do some soldering.
Thank you, that helps. Now to go pick up some solder and give it shot. Is it the same for the 3.5 L shaped plugs? The plastic housing doesn't look like it's threaded. If it is, it's beyond finger tight-I'll have to try the pliers on it. Thumbs up.
*GREAT So I can go out today and spend $30 on a pair of good earbuds or I can go spend $15 on a cheap soldering iron $25 on a magnifying micro clamping contraption and $5-7 on pckge of jack input ends and spend an hour + swearing and cursing and burning my fingers😃*.
Yeah, but you have those earbuds only until those break down too. You get one soldering kit and can use it to repair your headphones and whatever else countless times, only rarely needing to buy some new solder for a buck or two.
That electronics magnifier with the clips, I just used mine like that yesterday! (was trying to fix a broken iphone 5s, i think its dead Jim, might have fried display because I didnt disconnect battery before working on it)
Many thanks for this insightful video. You say at around the 4:02 mark the various colors of the wires and where they go, you say the outer pin is red, which outer pin would that be? If I look down on my jack I have two 'outer' pins on the left and the right. Does the red go on my right hand side pin or my left hand side pin? To also be clear, I am using a four-pole TRRS audio/mic jack so I have four colored wires: red, green, blue, and gold. I am assuming the gold goes in the same place as yours, the green at the top as you say in the video and the red and blue? Many thanks in advance for whatever answer is given.
I'm going to try this on my KOSS PortaPros that I got two christmas' ago and use regularly. That's an interesting soldering method. I remember from soldering projects as a kid that melting solder onto the tip if the iron and then rubbing it onto the connectors would have been bad form. If that because these connections are so small and delicate?
After spending many hours burning the wires and failing to get solder to stick to the wires, I found out that burning the wire to remove the enamel coating is actually a terrible idea. It's best to just apply the hot solder directly on the coating without removing it, it will dissolve the coating with its heat and get a perfect meld with the wire.
Please correct your verbal description to match the illustration shown at 4:00 or annotate the video to indicate to use the illustration and not the audio description in the video. Alternately, you can add a close up photograph of the plug terminals with attachment descriptions. Your verbal description for the wire attachments does not match the illustration at 4:00. At least on my plug, the illustration is correct. However, the terminals for red and green are the same size. The suggested annotated photograph would be added after illustration ends at 4:06 and would show the terminal for the red wire on the right, the terminal for the green wire on the left, and the long terminal for the gold wire in the far back (outboard) between two terminals. Thanks for taking the effort to make this video, though.
Awesome. Very helpful! Would love to see a video of you guys repurposing a cheap amplifier for a helmet. Currently working on this for a Halloween costume.
Also, I just fixed my wife's expensive chi hair straightener, had a blown thermister, cost me 2 bucks and 15 minutes of time. Got me thinking, space heaters, irons, curling irons, etc...all have thermisters and people throw blown ones away but they could fix it cheap if they knew how easy it is. You should make a diy on it.
Well done video. Thanks guys. Have you ever replaced the in-ear/bud piece? I need to take the buds from one set and attach them to the cord for another set. I'm assuming this is possible as I believe the internal wiring is all the same.
The tip about burning the bared wires with a lighter worked great. Thank you. I was trying to join cables before with bared wires, with no sound! Guess I am too old school and things have changed on wires since the days of just splicing/joining used to work. The minute I used the lighter, sound came out of the headphones, so thank you. BTW, Nowhere Man is a good choice but if you search youtube for stereo left and right test, there are various clips to test your channels :) Thanks guys.
I have a mic'd gaming headset. I cut off the 1/8" connector, stripped the wire to replace the faulty connector, and found one blue and one green wire, both very fine, and a fatter stranded black wire. Can you tell me what's up with that?
I dont know how to THANK u really i needed to know how to uncover that material which coating the 3 wires of the headphone but i connected them with something more easy it was a READY cable a ready plug(a 2 male Plug Cable) i cut one of them and used it with no need the soldering stuff
thanks for the tip of getting off the wire coating by flame. I used to use Tylenol or some dip stuff in past. that's why I was watching, to find out what to use. like you way better, cleaner and faster. By the way, who makes that Smore's shirt? my son would flip 8-)
I can just imagine someone watching this preparing for it and all the sudden their earbuds/headphones stop working. Bout midway through they go oh wait...
Thank you So much... I have a $300.00 Pair of studio head phones I thought I just fried... I'm listening to your video with them now!! I don't ever comment on anything... Ever... Thank you sincerely. !!
My left ear really enjoyed this video.
homerun443 same
+Bob Fisherman3 same
homerun443 my right ear
homerun443 mine too
homerun443 me too
The whole thing should have been filmed close up
David Lionel
I know right? Couldn't see shit in the beginning
Word!
Gotta build a brand with some faces
This is a good video but they forgot to mention a fundamental point. When you strip your cables you will essentially be left with four wires (for a set of standard headphones without a mic). Before burning off the coating cut your red 'pair' a little bit shorter so that you know which is which. The two uncoloured wires are grounds and will eventually be soldered to the gold leg. It makes it easier to burn the grounds first so that you can twist them together ready to be soldered onto the gold leg. Then burn the coloured wires and then length of the wire will let you know which is red and which is green. I originally burnt my wires and twisted the red with its ground and did the same with the green and had little to no sound which is probably what a lot of people here are finding. Hope this helps 👍
thx
Nice catch!
Both sides of my headphones work again! Thank you, I soldered it myself and it worked. No more cutting out on the left side. First time soldering too.
I watching this with no sound. Guess why.
LOL ME TOO
Idk, why?
me too dude i need to use my headphones BUT its broken
AIDS?
Same 😆
Every video. "Very easy to fix it." Totally
oh wow, didn't realize it was this simple. I have a headset with a broken jack sitting in my drawer for over 4 years now. There was this white fiber type thing inside with the different wires. This video has inspired me to attempt to repair it once more!
Ignore the fiber, it will burn right off!
the fiber is a nylon or cotton reinforcement for the wires so that flexing the wire doesn't break it
@@lukeskywalker6755 Except that shit never seems to do anything other than get in the way of fixing broken wires or intimidating newbies away from trying to self-repair.
Guys, I, while living, have achieved greatness at fixing headphones. Advice: after soldering & testing, REINFORCE the place where wire attaches to the plug! How? Superglue/liquid cement. Those glues are runny when you squeeze them out of the tube, but after a few minutes become gooey and like spiderweb. USE that 'spiderweb'. Wrap it around the spot you soldered plus half an inch onto the wire (many layers, generously). Before that (before even soldering, put a spring from a pen onto the wire. Once first batch of 'spiderweb' solidifies, pull (screw) the pen spring onto the spot and add more spiderweb. Wait 24 hours for joint to become hard as a rock, slap some black insulating tape of shrink tubing on top - the end. You get headphone jack that NEVER breaks off.
zzzontag Can you help me in fixing my headset wire? I have no idea with the color codes.
Felmea Mercado u should test them using yr phone
Keep changing the spots of the wires till u hear good and correctly then solder them and add super glue and tape and u are all ready to go :D
Is that a challenge
Gday. Why is it 99% of ALL headphone repair videos lacking the wiring information to connect the wires on the EAR BUDS , they all spend time at the end that connects to the source, but no video shows the wires from each ear bud, espically for studio headphones
because that's much more complicated
@@guineapig55555 Which is exactly why there should be more videos on it. No one needs a bunch of videos on simple shit. That's like looking up videos on math an having 10,000 on addition and two on calculus. We don't need this many videos on the same simple thing.
@@pavmx703 Totally agree. I'm looking for resources on how to wire up a total cable replacement for headphones, and where to buy the parts to do so. Really would like to do an all-around upgrade the quality of the cables from stock/oem.
its easier than to replace the jack
you just replace the cable up to the speakers
each speakers is marked with - +
brown its the ground
and red is R
green L
I an watching this with broken headphones so I couldn't hear no shit.
I am hearing this from only left ear :(
+Saad same
+Saad me too im hearing this on my left ear
lol
me too. lol
watching this in 2020 and watching him sneeze caused a "corona" scream in my head.
oh wow this comment brings me right back xd
the link to the jack doesnt work guys
Watch this video repairing skullcandy earphone: ua-cam.com/video/AQs2_FZvtBo/v-deo.html
The burned enamel residue and, if you burn for a long time, the copper oxide are very good insulators AND very good at preventing solder adhesion.
It's therefore best to GENTLY use some fine grit sandpaper to remove it. Either press the wires gently onto the sandpaper and drag OR fold the sandpaper over the wires and pull. Try to rotate the wires between swipes to expose as much copper as possible. Be gentle!
It would help if I could hear what your saying
+Brutus Magnus IKR xD Same
You're
+Brutus Magnus Even i cant hear anything so use captions
Why don't you just remove the earphones then you can hear better
+Brutus Magnus subtitles bruh..
The tip about using a lighter to burn the coatings is very useful, thank you. I just cut a different cable with a good jack and tied the wires together - no soldering :)
is this patched?
As far as standards, I was repairing my headphones with a 3.5mm connector that had some pre-cut wire on it. (The headphones had a short cable that I didn't want to make any shorter.) The headphones had red, white, and green and the replacement connector had red white and black. I ended up doing some research to see what wires did what depending on the wiring scheme.
Lol, my headphones broke and I cant hear the video.
sorry, i cant hear ur comment
Sorry what ? I'm blind
@Polite Gordon Ramsay then why are you here for a Headphone fixing video?😑
Watch this video repairing skullcandy earphone: ua-cam.com/video/AQs2_FZvtBo/v-deo.html
People, after years of experimenting, I have finally found the BEST way to solder these tiny headphone wires
1)Firstly strip the plastic wire housing.
2) Next apply PAINT THINNER on each of the tiny wires. Wait for it to dry(2 mins).
3) Then grab a soldering iron, put some solder on it, and run the tip of the iron through the wire in a DOWNWARDS DIRECTION -the wire should start bubbling - this actually gets rid of the enamel coating as it sticks to the solder. Let this solder drip on the table/remove this solder. (If you use lighter to burn the enamel, you don’t actually remove the enamel - you just melt it, which is why people find it so hard to solder these wires. )
Now, you have actually REMOVED and TINNED the wire (which is impossible if you use fire to melt the enamel)
At this stage you just need to connect the tinned wires together and solder.
I tried this and went from sound coming from my left ear to no sound at all. Thanks guys.
Wow. After all these years I stumble upon Patrick Norton again, yey! So happy that the TechTV crew is still kicking it strong on youtube!
I just fixed my favourite earplugs with my first ever soldering. Thanks for the video :)
good job solder! ... i mean soldier! hahaha
@@Synthpoptroubadour😂
Excellent vid, the first one I found on the subject that actually tells you which wires go to which terminal on the jack!
But it's very hard to solder such tiny wires. You need surgeon hands for this kinda work.
For those that have the Steel Series Arctis with their proprietary cable and random disconnects, audio only on one side or phone adapter not working without fiddling with the cable you can take a hammer and tap lightly the tip of the male connector (not the jack, their weird usb like cable) so that when you insert it in the female connector the metal housing pushes the contacts properly. This is how I fixed mine.
It would be helpful if you labeled your video to include the word jack since you actually fix the jack and not the cable. I happened to come across this, thank God, as it was just what I needed. Great instruction, very detailed and easy to follow.
One time I was fixing my good old Philips she9000 then I finished soldering I realized I didn't put the plug cover on the cable before.
ALL OF MY HATE.
So funny and annoying at the same time
If anyone one wants to find this plug just search "DIY 3.5mm (1/8") stereo Headphone Jack". I was researching for a bit and this seems to get the most results for this plug. There are also screw types of this plug where you don't need a soldering iron, you just need a small long screw driver, wire strippers, and a lighter to burn off the enamel. I see all the comments of people complaining about the price and burning their fingers; they should have spent 20 minutes researching or reading comments before hand.
How the fuck am i supposed to hear when my headphones are broken?
UA-cam CC option
Dominik dont USE URE HEADPHONE IDIOT
Dominik take the headphones *out*
My giant over-ear headphones with 50mm drivers had an inline mic, but all the headphone wires went through the mic's circuit board, and the wire for the left channel broke off the circuit board. After a few hours of trying to solder the tiniest wire to a circuit board, I gave up, desoldered all the wires, chucked the circuit board into my parts bin, and just directly soldered all the speaker wires to one another. It works wonderfully now! I did that 2 years ago and it is still holding up to this very day. however, by doing that, they don't have a mic anymore, but the mic was crap anyways so I didn't really care. Sadly, I might have to get new ones as the plastic diaphragm is starting to get crinkly and whenever I put it to max volume, I get terrible distortion as a result (it gets unbearably loud for me, and I always listen on medium volume). On medium volume though, it still works wonderfully. Also, they sound way better than beats and I got them for about 50 bucks 3-4 years ago. (if you are curious, the model # is JVC HA-MR55X). Ah, isn't diy fun?
Nice work guys - easy to understand, good delivery, wise counsel.
Thanks guys - gonna give this a shot. Now have - count them - 3 broken headphones and I'LL BE DAMNED IF I'LL BUY ANOTHER SET UNTIL I FIX AT LEAST ONE OF THESE!
How else is watching this with one side headphones 😂
Nice one guys. I love the disclaimers thrown in. Very funny...
Thank you for the lighter tip! All smooth sailing from there.
Thank the heavens I found this! I just got new headphone yesterday, good ones too, and they are already broken. I'm gonna do this soon so I can get back to what I was going to do.
Next vid project... How to REINFORCE your headphones so they withstand this kind of breakage :P
Plasti dip the area of the cord that has the most wear, made my phone charger last months longer
TheOutdoorsGeek What's plasti dip? :)
Hassan Selim Plasti Dip is a rubbery coating, people use it for everything from tool handles to custom cars. www.plastidip.com/
patrick norton oh I know that thing, I just didn't know it had a special name (I thought it was just "rubber" :D), and I didn't know you could easily apply it on something at your home/garage, I thought it was a very industrial process, interesting :)
(also thanks for being awesome and replying to me :D)
Buy good headphones. It's better buy 200 dollar headphones once per 5 years than 20 dollar headphones every month.
This video was the first thing that popped up when I search to figure out why one of my wires looked so weird. Fire solved it, thanks!
I don't have those tool at all to fix my cheap $5 head phones
Daphneamy360 Then buy new headphones bum
or buy tools bum
or dont buy $5 dollar headphones and they wont break bum
+jacobb really? i bought ones that cost 149e. and guess why im here
MAX-TastiC cause you take shitty care of your headphones bum
I don't get how your videos arnt reaching a huge audience? The content on your channel is so useful in day to day life with home DIY and repairs that you should be getting more popular each day! *I guess thats just a short wait till you 2 are famous ;)*
Thanks, you can help spread the word! Tell your friends and family about the show...sharing links on social media really does help introduce the show to new viewers.
Yeah I don't mind sharing videos... As a DJ this particular video will come in useful for many of my other friends in the same industry.
+DIY Tryin my earphones have a mic(trrs) but the jack broke, can i use a TRS jack replacement instead? dont care if the microphone doesnt work anymore, just want music lol
You can, or just find what line is the mic one and cut it off and stick a regular jack on...
What soldering iron model do you recommend?
Or, at least, what minimum wattage?
And I notice you use a tip with a fine point instead of a flat head -- does that help keep the tip hotter?
Also, do you use solder with or without lead in it? I know the non-leaded kind is safer/healthier, but for the life of me, I cannot get it to melt and work, so I just resort to the leaded kind. What do you use?
I would love it if you guys would do a short vid just on soldering and soldering irons (I did not see in your video list but I might be blind).
Thanks for the tip today! I am running out to my Radio Shack (the last one remaining in my area before they go the way of the carrier pidgeon) to pick up a 1/8" jack and do it!
non-leaded seems to need more heat. I modify airsoft toys so I've got a bit of experience when the leaded wasn't available, I too had a bunch of problems getting it both to get hot enough to melt and stay that hot long enough to get whatever I was doing done.
I gave you a like for teaching me to burn the headphone cable! That's gold!
Right after I threw away my broken headphones, I see this.
Thanks for making this video. I followed it step by step and was able to successfully replace the jack on my headphones. Thanks!
I can save millions with this
Bingo, tried to fix my Sennheisers by just replacing the bad end that plugs into the headphone with another one from a previous cable that also had one go bad. I tried just twisting the bare wires together to see if that would work and was surprised when no sound came out at all. I didn't realize they had a coating on them, just assumed the color was anodized.
Now I got it working just like new, thanks for saving me $20.
This COULD be a good video but MY HEADPHONES ARE BROKEN SO I CANT HEAR!
Aaron Gould unplug them
Captions
Man I’ve wiggled mine so much both ends are unwired and tapped up but hopefully this will help. I sooo am afraid 😱 to do the example your showing. I’ve been shocked one to many times. Thanks was helpful still.
Excellent!!! I get through so many headphones due to this problem! All you need to do now is pronounce soldering correctly :P
Our British coworker is convinced that we pronounce it that way just to mess with him.
DIY Tryin Sol-Der-Ing sounds so odd compared to Sah-der-ing, lol.
patrick norton Do you guys also spell in wrong? :D
English English that is all :P
But Britain came first they are right
Here's an idea... I had 2 car chargers for my note 3 and the micro usb end was not working. I soldered a new micro usb port on and now they work! Easy project that will make a lot of people happy!
How the fuck am I supposed to do ALL of that myself?!
In case anyone wondered, the big one is the ground and for the brown cable(there could be 2 brown cables for mic ones), where do i connect the red, blue and green ones?, well there are 3 smaller pins, left one for blue, middle one for green (microphone) and right one for the red cable.
I would prefer watching what they are doing, not who they are
Thanks! I had a cable/soldering lose inside my k701 and didn't know how to take them apart so I could fix them. Thanks to your video I have yet again working headphones.
FUCKIN HATE ADS
Sorry :(. But it's how we get paid to make videos.
LOL ITS OK LOVE YOUR VIDS! HATE UA-camS POLICY!!!! GET THAT $$$$
MyWillyboi Thanks!
+MyWillyboi hey don't think it has anything to with a "UA-cam policy". Curators can choose to monetize their content with ads, and therefore earn money.
+MyWillyboi USE AN ADBLOCKER!! Unless you're on mobile because that's too much work for watching a 30-second ad.
The most important task of the whole performance.....building / buying contraption with alligator clip to stabilize space to enable iron, solder and wires to come together if doing this alone without a buddy to help.
i cant hear anything IF MY HEADPHONES DOESNT WORK
The joke is funny no matter how many times you all keep posting it.
Do you look up how to fix a broken cell phone screen while surfing on your broken cell phone ?
Besides who the fuck doesn't have some speakers ?
*C a p t i o n s*
For anybody installing a 3.5mm male jack for an iambic paddle, the tip is for dit, the second ring is for dah, the base is the ground. I use old phone cord. It's durable and cheap or even free sometimes. The jacks are about $2 ea., Radio Shack or online.Use rosin core solder, of course.
I inhaled... what now? do I hold it in?... please respond quick :)
Uhhh...are u alive?!
I know im 3 years late but if youre still holding, dont worry it should come out of your ass
@@shawnkay5462 i mean he hasnt responded yet..
Ok, for people who have headphones with mic usually blue and green wire are + for the 2 headphones and red and gold twisted together is - for the headphones, separate clear red and clear gold are + and - for the mic, I find it easier than soldering to cut off the wire and connect to another wire with good plug.
Wtf am I doing here, I'm listening to this with my headphones
Obviously you never heard the original mix of Nowhere man, but Kudos for digging the greatest band of all time!
Or just buy a new headphones wire.. more expensive to get the equipment in the first place.
Sun Trail Not all headphones can do that..
What's the point of buying a new wire if the original wire is SOLDERED TO THE HEADPHONES in the first place.
You can't just rip it out and expect to find a 3,5mm jack underneath it. To fix non-modular headphones, you have to do some soldering.
Thank you, that helps. Now to go pick up some solder and give it shot. Is it the same for the 3.5 L shaped plugs? The plastic housing doesn't look like it's threaded. If it is, it's beyond finger tight-I'll have to try the pliers on it. Thumbs up.
*GREAT So I can go out today and spend $30 on a pair of good earbuds or I can go spend $15 on a cheap soldering iron $25 on a magnifying micro clamping contraption and $5-7 on pckge of jack input ends and spend an hour + swearing and cursing and burning my fingers😃*.
R Curtis this might be for those of us with $100+ headsets. In which case, yes, its a very cheap fix.
Justin Foreman Good Point
The tools would be used for future projects, hopefully.
Yeah, but you have those earbuds only until those break down too. You get one soldering kit and can use it to repair your headphones and whatever else countless times, only rarely needing to buy some new solder for a buck or two.
R Curtis 😂😂😂, the cooked smell of your flesh😂😂. I know man.
i forgot his name but i used to love their computer tv programmes.very educational.i wonder what happend to those shows.
Currently as of age 15, I have destroyed and gone through 70 pairs of crappy headphones.
Blake.TV with the price of those headphones you could have bought one awesome pair of headphones :P
Dude you're 20 now, how weird is that?
That electronics magnifier with the clips, I just used mine like that yesterday! (was trying to fix a broken iphone 5s, i think its dead Jim, might have fried display because I didnt disconnect battery before working on it)
Danng so radio shack was still around 9 years ago. I miss it now. What a pain.
Many thanks for this insightful video. You say at around the 4:02 mark the various colors of the wires and where they go, you say the outer pin is red, which outer pin would that be? If I look down on my jack I have two 'outer' pins on the left and the right. Does the red go on my right hand side pin or my left hand side pin? To also be clear, I am using a four-pole TRRS audio/mic jack so I have four colored wires: red, green, blue, and gold. I am assuming the gold goes in the same place as yours, the green at the top as you say in the video and the red and blue? Many thanks in advance for whatever answer is given.
OMG I did forget the cover piece once (had to put it the wire first ) so glad I was not the only one.
what soldering tool do you recommend? thank you for the video.
DIY Tryin you can actually use the solder and the solder iron to remove the coating. The solder will be hot enough to remove the coating.
I'm going to try this on my KOSS PortaPros that I got two christmas' ago and use regularly.
That's an interesting soldering method. I remember from soldering projects as a kid that melting solder onto the tip if the iron and then rubbing it onto the connectors would have been bad form. If that because these connections are so small and delicate?
Nice, you warn us about ventilation and then show us the effects of not having any. Was this a nod to Tim Allen?
Or my buddy Aloha, who's gonna call me up and rip me a new one for not having a ventilator on...
well i dont have any resources to do this but happy to get the info
After spending many hours burning the wires and failing to get solder to stick to the wires, I found out that burning the wire to remove the enamel coating is actually a terrible idea.
It's best to just apply the hot solder directly on the coating without removing it, it will dissolve the coating with its heat and get a perfect meld with the wire.
That technique has never really worked for us, but hope it helps somebody else!
Sad to see such good channels die :(
I immediately visited on UA-cam when I just got my right side earphone spoilt.. m now enjoying this video with my only left side earphone.
Please correct your verbal description to match the illustration shown at 4:00 or annotate the video to indicate to use the illustration and not the audio description in the video. Alternately, you can add a close up photograph of the plug terminals with attachment descriptions. Your verbal description for the wire attachments does not match the illustration at 4:00. At least on my plug, the illustration is correct. However, the terminals for red and green are the same size. The suggested annotated photograph would be added after illustration ends at 4:06 and would show the terminal for the red wire on the right, the terminal for the green wire on the left, and the long terminal for the gold wire in the far back (outboard) between two terminals. Thanks for taking the effort to make this video, though.
Thank you! I just ordered 5 trrs connectors to fix my broken headphoneS! Great channel
Thanks to you, I finally repaired my 1984 Sony MDR-70 headphones ! Works like a charm :-)
Very good and easy. You can take it to the next level with shrink tubes before soldering or moulding into tiny amount of hotglue.
Remember to get the "full cable" with all insulation even the outer one into the strain relief clip before pinching it shut.... it helps...
hello can you please add on the description the tools you are using to repair , some links on amazon or whatever so we can buy them.thanks
did this and my headsets worked well on both sides thumps up for you guys
Awesome. Very helpful! Would love to see a video of you guys repurposing a cheap amplifier for a helmet. Currently working on this for a Halloween costume.
Also, I just fixed my wife's expensive chi hair straightener, had a blown thermister, cost me 2 bucks and 15 minutes of time. Got me thinking, space heaters, irons, curling irons, etc...all have thermisters and people throw blown ones away but they could fix it cheap if they knew how easy it is. You should make a diy on it.
You guys may have saved my $100 studio headphones! I will be DIYing this when Radioshack opens ~Thanks :D
Well done video. Thanks guys.
Have you ever replaced the in-ear/bud piece? I need to take the buds from one set and attach them to the cord for another set. I'm assuming this is possible as I believe the internal wiring is all the same.
The tip about burning the bared wires with a lighter worked great. Thank you. I was trying to join cables before with bared wires, with no sound! Guess I am too old school and things have changed on wires since the days of just splicing/joining used to work.
The minute I used the lighter, sound came out of the headphones, so thank you.
BTW, Nowhere Man is a good choice but if you search youtube for stereo left and right test, there are various clips to test your channels :)
Thanks guys.
I have a mic'd gaming headset. I cut off the 1/8" connector, stripped the wire to replace the faulty connector, and found one blue and one green wire, both very fine, and a fatter stranded black wire. Can you tell me what's up with that?
It would be nice if you show how to fix the "waterproof" headphones that come with some jackets and hoodies, nice video thanks
great idea but my issue is at the other end, can you do a video for that please?
I dont know how to THANK u
really i needed to know how to uncover that material which coating the 3 wires of the headphone but i connected them with something more easy it was a READY cable a ready plug(a 2 male Plug Cable) i cut one of them and used it with no need the soldering stuff
WOW just found your channel. Are you doing this at a public access station your area. Great job you two. ____ Busters here you come.
I did this with way too thick of solder and way to low temp of a soldering iron. 10/10
thanks for the tip of getting off the wire coating by flame. I used to use Tylenol or some dip stuff in past. that's why I was watching, to find out what to use. like you way better, cleaner and faster. By the way, who makes that Smore's shirt? my son would flip 8-)
Some headphones and the cords are just made cheaply and so they break!😂😂😂
I can just imagine someone watching this preparing for it and all the sudden their earbuds/headphones stop working. Bout midway through they go oh wait...
What about the blue cable and the two white fabric cables ?
I have gold, blue green and red
Thank you So much... I have a $300.00 Pair of studio head phones I thought I just fried... I'm listening to your video with them now!!
I don't ever comment on anything... Ever...
Thank you sincerely.
!!