Cello Strings Soldering Question - HELP


Hey all, I am almost complete with the re-installation of a fairly large Cello Rig. I am stuck on the soldering of the fisher connectors to the custom length Cello String interconnect wire. This wire is copper (coated?) and does not seem to want to take the solder. I am not a master at soldering to begin with but this Cello String wire is really hard to work with. Does anyone out there have any tips?

If I take a length of the wire, strip it, I can't even test continuity between the ends - I gather this is because of the copper (possibly coated). If I could 'tin' the ends effectively, I could take this work - but no luck. I need help! - Andrew
amfibianandrew

Showing 3 responses by amfibianandrew

Lostbears, that is a good tip (ha!). Is a solder pot an expensive item? That should tin the end of the copper wire to make it conduct signal?
That sounds like the issue then. I need to find someone in New York City who can do this. Separately, the Fischer 104 connectors are such a pain to terminate. I only have one set of male and female ends and they are currently part of a single interconnect. I am weary of disconnecting the connectors from perfectly terminated wiring. Is it totally 'not audiophile friendly' to cut the wire back 10" from the connectors and solder those pre-terminated ends to the wire run in the walls?
Thanks guys. I found someone here is NYC to help - he's got a solder pot! But I need to find some Fischer 104 Male and Female ends so I can afford to mess one up in the process.