- You cut the wires, strip a small section of insulation (about 1/4-3/8"), and 'tin' the wire ends. This is done by putting some solder on the iron, and runnning it along the exposed wire section. Soldering flux makes this easier (you can get it at Sears), as the amount of flux in rosin core solder is just enough to be worthless.
- After you tin the wires, take a section of heat shrink (about 1/2") and slide it over each of the wires you're going to solder....just one side of the joint, so either on the harness side or CPS side.
- Once you have the wires tinned and the heat shrink on, you want to take a SMALL pair of needle-nose pliers and bend the tinned ends into a hook.
- Then hook the two ends together, squeeze gently with the pliers to close the hook ends, and put a tiny drop of flux on the joint.
- Put solder on the end of your iron, hold the joint taut, and apply the solder to the joint. After it flows together, you can remove the iron, wait a few seconds, and move to the next wire.
- When all of your joints are done, take a small brush (small wedge paint brush with stiff bristles would probaby work, or even a clean/new cheap toothbrush) and some rubbing alcohol (91% or higher), and clean the flux off of your joints, as flux can cause corrosion down the road.
- Then, slide the heat shrink over the joint, and pass the heat shrink through the flame of a lighter until it's shrunk-down and conformed to the wire and joint.
You're done. :bigthumb: