C:\Documents and Settings\Eric\My Documents\My Pictures\instructables earbud project\P1010016.JPG
After throwing away my fifth pair of $15 earbuds i was sick and tiered of these things breaking, so when this pair broke i got out my X-Acto knife and started cutting.
 
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quantuminduction says: Jan 2, 2012. 5:09 AM
I didn´t understand the good wire and bad wire stuff.
can u explain it to me please!!!!!
eijams says: Nov 23, 2011. 11:36 AM
OK SO MINE HAS FIBERS OF CLOTH ON THE INSIDE OF THE WIRES ...WHY
wsikes says: Sep 3, 2011. 9:00 PM
Does this work for iPod earphones? would it also fix the jackmic? also I like the sony barnd earbuds they last a long time they're only $10 and once one of them shorted out and i just left them for a week and didn't use them and when i came back and tried them out they worked again.... until my brother stepped on them.
joemonkey says: Aug 21, 2007. 9:14 AM
ipod head fones are the best. they are $28.99, but the ones i got with my 1st gen nano work still and theyre a year and a half old.
jaraya in reply to joemonkeyMar 16, 2011. 10:04 PM
Mine JUST broke. I haven't even had them a year yet. only a couple months. UGH! they're my ONLY earbuds, and I don't have the money to buy new ones -_-"
Cheezmonka says: Jan 29, 2011. 10:17 PM
My earbuds have a threaded cord. As in like, material, fabric, not regular rubber coating like most earbuds. How do I go about repairing them? If it helps, the brand is "lenntek".
xXSasoriXx says: Dec 7, 2010. 1:27 PM
can we use a diff. type of knife?
misteravocado5 says: Sep 16, 2010. 6:28 PM
Sorry if I'm not understanding this, but wouldn't the blobs of solder touch together inside the heat-shrink wrap and short the thing out? How are the three little wires insulated from each other once you solder? Thanks.
El Mano says: Apr 15, 2010. 1:54 PM
I love not having soldering equipment. My electronics look so homemade, all the wires held together with tin foil and tape.
nabsol in reply to El ManoJun 29, 2010. 11:53 AM
so does that mean on the part where he solder the wires u just put foil paper? or electric tape
entreri says: Jan 28, 2010. 1:36 PM
My $16 skull candies did this, i dont have a soldering iron or shrink wrap, what else could i use? would ceran wrap work? it doesnt seem like it would and i dont want to test it.
vbsoto says: Sep 8, 2009. 6:40 AM
I made a similar repair after reading hear about removing the coating. It worked for about a week, then I started getting drop outs again. This time I went to the Dollar and bought a donor pair of earbuds. I desoldered the cord off the buds. No coating to deal with and they were already tinned. Soldered the new plug and cord onto the good buds and presto! Worked like a charm and easier than all this other hassel.
drumsticks135 says: Aug 22, 2009. 1:26 PM
hey, i'm wondering if anyone knows how to fix this problem: my ear buds have been fine, except this week i noticed that the right ear is significantly softer in volume, but the signal is still crystal clear. so if i plug them into my computer i can pan the volume more right, and it sounds fine, but if they are in my ipod it's still messed up.
grey_fedora says: Jun 10, 2009. 7:24 PM
I used this instructable to fix my earbuds, and they have been working perfectly for weeks now. Thanks!
ear bud repair.jpg
codongolev says: Dec 5, 2008. 4:14 PM
I couldn't get the solder to stick. any suggestions?
keefurxxcore in reply to codongolevMay 28, 2009. 6:40 PM
You need to burn/ sand off the insulation off of the wires.
http://www.alexwhittemore.com/?p=205
codongolev in reply to keefurxxcoreMay 29, 2009. 2:14 PM
thanks, but I got it figured out since then.
keefurxxcore in reply to codongolevMay 29, 2009. 3:13 PM
Heh, thought so, just wanted to put it up.
smeurer says: Aug 28, 2008. 2:55 PM
my cat cut my earbud wires is there anyway to fix it please let me know my e-mail is smeurer@neo.rr.com
DELETED_yoghurtsniffer in reply to smeurerAug 30, 2008. 12:44 AM
(removed by author or community request)
smeurer in reply to DELETED_yoghurtsnifferAug 31, 2008. 11:29 AM
the cord leading to the earbuds
kenny94 says: Jul 17, 2008. 8:11 AM
mine did this straight out of the box
visus says: May 6, 2007. 2:54 PM
Just FYI, it's safer and better practice to shrink up shrink tubing with a hair dryer.
easycom89 (author) in reply to visusMay 6, 2007. 5:54 PM
I had some trouble with a hair dryer. It was industrial shrink wrap from work so.......idk a match seemed to shrink the wrap real fast.
n0ukf in reply to easycom89Mar 12, 2008. 9:07 AM
hair dryers may not concentrate the heat enough. Rather than that or matches (or lighters), I hold the shrink tubing very close over the soldering iron. It may not be as fast as a flame, but there's less chance of burning the tubing or the wire insulation.
You can also use a heat gun like what they use on model airplane monokote (and similar) heat shrink coverings (also used for stamp embossing). Here's one source (random search) http://www.hobby-lobby.com/heatgun.htm this has a removable concentrating nozzle that would work nice for doing wire heat shrink.
ducks says: Jun 28, 2007. 8:06 PM
The problem I was having with my earbuds (2 pair of Sony's) was that the sound in one ear would just stop. I'd remove the soft rubber ear piece and clean the cover which would seem to help - for a while. But both pair eventually had one ear that stopped for no apparent reason (wires and plugs were okay). After exhausting the cleaning approach with both pair, I decided to try to poke a few holes in the material that covers the small plastic tube, and to my horror, ripped it completely loose. After being sure that I had completely ruined them, I put the soft rubber ear piece back on, plugged them in and voila, they worked fine. The cover that I ripped off is apparently just to keep ear wax, sweat, etc. from entering the plastic tube and ruining the internals of the earbud. I took a small amount of cotton and filled the small plastic tube as a substitute for the small cover originally glued to the end of the tube, and both pair of my earbuds have worked fine ever since.
ducks in reply to ducksAug 22, 2007. 6:04 PM
Well, that fix lasted only a couple of weeks - was unable to get them to work again after that. Now using new set of earbuds - Bass freq - after doing a fair amount of online research . . .
zootboy says: Jul 25, 2007. 11:50 AM
with my headphones, i have needed to replace the entire jack. It works the same way, but you solder the wires onto a new jack from radioshaque.
The_K-man says: May 14, 2007. 10:39 PM
I tried this with my broken $40 pair... After stripping the wire, I found 4 separate wires, and they were not regular wires. They seemed to be made of gold-colored cloth and they were very threadlike, and did not hold their shape if I twisted them. Soldering was unsuccessful. Anyone have any tips? I'll have to try again later.
James (pseudo-geek) in reply to The_K-manJul 18, 2007. 8:28 PM
the wire is a thin, enameled wire. (either steel or copper) "enameled" means it has a VERY thin insulation coating rather than a thick one. this makes it to where you can use a very thin cord. (plus you can bend it alot).
James (pseudo-geek) in reply to James (pseudo-geek)Jul 18, 2007. 8:29 PM
oh, and to solder it, before you put the solder on, burn the enamel off with the soldering iron.
n0ukf in reply to The_K-manJun 4, 2007. 3:03 PM
if you look closely enough, you'll see this is probably a ribbon of foil-like wire flat-wrapped around some kind of fiber (nylon, teflon or whatever).
easycom89 (author) in reply to The_K-manMay 15, 2007. 10:07 AM
The wire was actualy a cloth material? Make sure the cloth isn't just covering up the real wire. I'm begining to think that only the cheap headphones use wire and more expensive ones use this cloth like material.
James (pseudo-geek) in reply to easycom89Jul 18, 2007. 8:27 PM
the wire is a thin, enameled wire. (either steel or copper) "enameled" means it has a VERY thin insulation coating rather than a thick one. this makes it to where you can use a very thin cord. (plus you can bend it alot).
mondaymonkey says: May 12, 2007. 10:16 PM
I got a really good idea. Buy a good pair of head phones. Like the ones i got on right now are some samsungs. Before these, i would go through one about every 2 weeks. It sucked. So i decided to buy some good ones and iv had em for about 6 months so id say thev lasted a long time
ich bin ein pyro says: May 7, 2007. 7:43 AM
when i saw this im like ah! this is the solution to my broken headphone! i look in further and see thats its how to fix the jack-wire connection but i have a speaker that completely fell off. i guess i could fix it myself but im a little lazy
Fenwick says: May 5, 2007. 10:22 PM
I've gone through many pairs of headphones because of a short in the wire. Simple, but sweet instructable.
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