Fixing a Laptop Charging Cable

 by Fazulka
IMG_4606.JPG
 
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Step 1: Slice off the old sheath

Unplug the charger!

 Slice away the old rubber sheath.  Underneath there is the metal plug, and it should have 2 wires soldered to it.  One is the center of the wire from the charger, and the other is a short one that connects to the metal strands from the outer part of the charger. Try to remember which wire is connect to which part.

Once the rubber plug is removed cut the plug off the cord, cutting off the damaged part of the cord.

Next cut the sheath from around the magnet, and the magnet should slide off the cord.

You should be left with just a plain cord coming out of the transformer box.  

Hold the frayed ends of the solder with the pliers and heat the solder attaching them to the plug to pull them off.  A vise or an extra pair of hands helps with all the soldering.

I have no pictures for this step.

pmsfo says: Apr 26, 2011. 11:10 PM
I think there is a typo on your last sentence here: "The third picture below shows the tubes in place so the two wires can short out." Shouldn't "can short out" be "can't short out"?
unkn0wn1 says: Jan 26, 2011. 9:22 AM
pink heat shrink. lol
why pink?
Fashim says: Jun 21, 2010. 12:32 AM
Would this work for the middle of the cord, I need to thoroughly put it together so the cables don't come apart.
Fazulka (author) in reply to FashimJun 21, 2010. 6:49 AM
It would work... I would tie a little knot so if the cord is pulled it won't pull right on the soldered joint though.
Fashim in reply to FazulkaJun 23, 2010. 2:14 AM
Smart thinking, thanks. I bought the Heat Shrink yesterday.
Fashim in reply to FashimAug 17, 2010. 4:24 AM
Finally Got it, used an Inline or something like that then taped it with electrical tape and heat shrinked it. It works fine but now the Jack is broken thank god for this instructable.
getbusy21 says: Feb 10, 2010. 3:46 PM
The magnet is a ferrite bead. We use them as low pass filters for data wires. I could be wrong but I don't think they have anything to do with power spikes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrite_bead
Fazulka (author) in reply to getbusy21Feb 11, 2010. 7:31 AM
 Thanks
getbusy21 in reply to getbusy21Feb 10, 2010. 3:51 PM
http://revision3.com/tzdaily/2007-12-26ferrite
Fazulka (author) in reply to getbusy21Feb 11, 2010. 7:31 AM
Thank you for the link.
winston_smith says: Feb 10, 2010. 7:50 AM
What you call a magnet is actually a toroid which is a filter which helps cancel spikes in the power being provided by the power supply.  Removing it could cause other problems not so easy and much more expensive to fix.
Fazulka (author) in reply to winston_smithFeb 10, 2010. 2:13 PM
Thanks, I will add that in.
cyberfux says: Feb 9, 2010. 8:48 PM
 Good Job!

I don't know how often i had to fix my laptop cords ;-)
I fell over ove cord, the connector brake, my dogs chewed on 3 or 4 cords as puppies, rodents (i live in a farmer village) ate one etc.

I think you could call me "laptop power cord fixing pro", but you made an awesome job!
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