The outer sleeve wearing away is the main issue
Take more care of your tools. Don't swing them around by the cable etc.
At the first sign of that happening, dismantle, chop the end off the cable, and re-assemble.
The outer sleeve wearing away is the main issue
just to clarify, that pic isnt mine, its just a random screenshot i took of a video where i saw the thing i wanted
but yes it is, thats a moulded plug with a plastic earth pin

I don't, of course. Its a belt sander though, it gets moved around a lot and cables flexTake more care of your tools. Don't swing them around by the cable etc.
At the first sign of that happening, dismantle, chop the end off the cable, and re-assemble.
I'm personally not convinced that any of these things do much good and, as you imply, it seems that some make things worse. No matter what the design (and material) of the boot/sleeve/whatever, there will be a 'vulnerability' where the cable emerges from the end of it.Ah, "strain relief boot" seems to be what the one without slots in it is called ... Yes those are godawful and everything that uses them breaks right at the end, its utterly terrible. I want to get rid of that thing and replace it with something that will ACTUALLY spread strain out ... slotted ones at least are definitely better, it looks like there are spiral designs too that look even better still.
Nor can I - and the angle at which the plug has been photographed mean that an earth pin, if present, would be obvious, hasn't it?...I really can't see a plastic earth pin in that photo.

no i can see a clear purpose for it, they are there to prevent the cable from bending at an overly sharp angle, which would pinch and stretch opposite sides of that bendI'm personally not convinced that any of these things do much good and, as you imply, it seems that some make things worse. No matter what the design (and material) of the boot/sleeve/whatever, there will be a 'vulnerability' where the cable emerges from the end of it.
If one avoids 'abusing' the cables too much, it seems that they usually last intact for a very long time without any of these gizmos.
I don't think that's necessarily true.no i can see a clear purpose for it, they are there to prevent the cable from bending at an overly sharp angle, which would pinch and stretch opposite sides of that bend ... The resistance they provide forces the bending to be spread out across a larger section of cable, at a much shallower angle. The concept is sound

thats clearly just a problem with how they end. They need to taper out gradually and be relatively more flexible at that end, so that there isn't a sudden, sharp change in the cable's flexibility, but a gradual gradientI don't think that's necessarily true.
As I wrote, many of these devices merely kick the potential problem a little way down the road. Although it's true that they "force the bending to be spread out across a larger section of cable, at a much shallower angle", hence "prevent the cable from bending at an overly sharp angle" over their length, the cable often can, and will, "bend at an overly sharp angle" at the end of the boot/sleeve/whatever.
All true, but I don't think that (m)any are anything like as sophisticated in their design as you are suggesting.thats clearly just a problem with how they end. They need to taper out gradually and be relatively more flexible at that end, so that there isn't a sudden, sharp change in the cable's flexibility, but a gradual gradient
Yes, maybe - as you imply, one clearly could have a reasonable stab at an 'optimum design'.im starting to feel like i need to actually design one now....
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