How do you refurbish a cable?
wouldn't it cost less to just scrap for metal and make another one?
Hope this helps
http://www.instructables.com/id/Repair-a-Hdmi-cable/
As for your question of cost, it really depends if you value your own time or not
>>58238351
thanks anon
do i need a tradesmans cookie too
Depends on the issue and the wire. If there's a simple break or something, you could chop the wire by the break and with minimal terminating effort have two smaller cables. Or, splicing wires is pretty cheap and quick, especially if you have a machine to automate it.
>>58238341
Means they stuck it back in the bag after someone returned it.
It means they bought it from company failures or someone returned it and they sell it back. Don't be a retard
>>58238341
it's a jewish trick
you're buying a second hand cable, nothing more
i didn't want to buy it just wondering
>>58239055
>you're buying a second hand cable, nothing more
You are buying a second-hand cable that has been tested and comes with a warranty.
>>58238341
>he doesn't service his cables
>>58238456
This, nobody actualyl does any maintenance or repairs on generic consumer electronics stuff. It's just to make you feel better about buying a used product.
>yeah mean they changed the thermal paste and fans on this refurbished GPU and now it should run better than new!
>it's actually just someone else's RMA that wasn't obviously broken and is now sitting in another box
>>58239658
>a warranty
Literally useless. They are counting on the fact that it costs more to send it back then to get a new one. Most people are not that autistic so they just write it off when it happens. It's not a mark of quality.
>digestive
dirty crumpet sucker detected
>>58238341
$4.40 for HDMI 2.0 cable from monoprice
If its cheaper to repair, it maybe worth to repair.