Ian
Administrator
Has anyone here tried splicing an HDMI cable? From what I've read, this could be a fruitless exercise - however I'm going to give it a try, as the alternative is even worse!
We've got an HDMI cable which is channelled into the wall (not in a conduit, it's fixed in place
) and some of the active circuitry fried when we had a very near miss with lightning. Luckily, it appears as if the active HDMI cable has a booster in the ends of the cable, rather than in the middle (as appears the norm).
Because of this, I've bought what I think looks like the same cable (can't be 100% sure as I didn't install the initial one) and I'm going to try splice both end connectors back on.
I've got an awful feeling that there's a very slim chance it will work, but I'll be careful to minimise disturbing the twisted pairs and shielding and make a neat job of soldering
. The alternative would be to pull the old cable out and redecorate which would take days - so as a temporary alternative (until I re-do it next year with conduit in the channel) I'm going to give it a try.
Is there anything I should be aware of to maximise my chances of this working? From what I understand there is a very slim chance of success, but it's probably worth a shot.
I've got a backup plan that may work if this fails, which I've tested on a spare HDMI cable. I used 4 of the twisted wire pairs in the HDMI cable and re-terminated them as a network cable - it works fine as far as I can tell, so I can use an HDMI over CAT5e adaptor as a last resort.
We've got an HDMI cable which is channelled into the wall (not in a conduit, it's fixed in place
Because of this, I've bought what I think looks like the same cable (can't be 100% sure as I didn't install the initial one) and I'm going to try splice both end connectors back on.
I've got an awful feeling that there's a very slim chance it will work, but I'll be careful to minimise disturbing the twisted pairs and shielding and make a neat job of soldering
Is there anything I should be aware of to maximise my chances of this working? From what I understand there is a very slim chance of success, but it's probably worth a shot.
I've got a backup plan that may work if this fails, which I've tested on a spare HDMI cable. I used 4 of the twisted wire pairs in the HDMI cable and re-terminated them as a network cable - it works fine as far as I can tell, so I can use an HDMI over CAT5e adaptor as a last resort.