Cable harness

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A cable laced wiring harness installed in a component of a Tesla coil
Harness of coaxial cables.
Harness of car audio cables.

A cable harness, also known as a wire harness, cable assembly, wiring assembly or wiring loom, is an assembly of cables or wires which transmit signals or electrical power. The cables are bound together by straps, cable ties, cable lacing, sleeves, electrical tape, conduit, a weave of extruded string, or a combination thereof.

Commonly used in automobiles, as well as construction machinery, cable harnesses provide several advantages over loose wires and cables. For example, many aircraft, automobiles and spacecraft contain many masses of wires which would stretch over several kilometres if fully extended. By binding the many wires and cables into a cable harness, the wires and cables can be better secured against the adverse effects of vibrations, abrasions, and moisture. By constricting the wires into a non-flexing bundle, usage of space is optimized, and the risk of a short is decreased. Since the installer has only one harness to install (as opposed to multiple wires), installation time is decreased and the process can be easily standardized. Binding the wires into a flame-retardant sleeve also lowers the risk of electrical fires.

Production

Cable harnesses are usually designed according to geometric and electrical requirements. A diagram is then provided (either on paper or on a monitor) for the assembly preparation and assembly.

The wires are first cut to the desired length, usually using a special wire-cutting machine. The wires may also be printed on by a special machine during the cutting process or on a separate machine. After this, the ends of the wires are stripped to expose the metal (or core) of the wires, which are fitted with any required terminals or connector housings. The cables are assembled and clamped together on a special workbench, or onto a pin board (assembly board), according to the design specification, to form the cable harness. After fitting any protective sleeves, conduit, or extruded yarn, the harness is either fitted directly in the vehicle or shipped.

In spite of increasing automation, in general, cable harnesses continue to be manufactured by hand, due to the many different processes involved, such as:

  • routing wires through sleeves,
  • taping with fabric tape, in particular on branch outs from wire strands,
  • crimping terminals onto wires, particularly for so-called multiple crimps (more than one wire into one terminal),
  • inserting one sleeve into another,
  • fastening strands with tape, clamps or cable ties.

It is difficult to automate these processes. Manual production remains more cost effective than automation, especially with small batch sizes.

Pre-production can be automated in part. This affects:

  • Cutting individual wires (cutting machine),
  • crimping terminals onto one or both sides of the wire,
  • partial plugging of wires prefitted with terminals into connector housings (module),
  • soldering of wire ends (solder machine), and
  • twisting wires.

Testing the electrical functionality of a cable harness can be done with the aid of a test board. The circuit diagram data are pre-programmed into the test board, where harnesses can be tested individually or in multiple numbers.[1][2]

Assortment of wire harness shown

In sound engineering

The cable harnesses used in sound engineering (stage and studio) for carrying audio signals are also called multicores.

Distributors

Wire harnesses are engineered , designed and sold as mass production lots for items such as personal computers, medical saving devices, aerospace industry, etc. and also small lots for prototype work in any industry. Competent distributors will abide by industry standards such as IPC/WHMA-A-620 and have certified employees on hand to verify the wire harness is compliant to the standard.

Distributor United States of America:

References