Initially fine, then degradation sets in over time.
That’s one way to do it, and it is a way to do it that might last 20-30-40 years and need a bit of cleaning every now and then, if done with good mechanically and electrically connectors and the right metallic interfaces.
EG, neutrik speak-on connectors are supplied this way, parts wise.... and they expect you to commit to something similar to the above scenario. Users of speak-ons will do many times do this... but very few do the solder fill bit.
If your wire is inexpensive per foot, clean off about 2 inches or so of bare wire strands, then twist them so they are tightly packed and contacting each other, tie one end down and stretch out the other, solder soak that section that has wire to wire strand contact, then cut the excess end off, and have this stretch bit of solder and self-contacted strands (no wider than the original strands/set)....then insert the bulk soldered bit into the connector and screw that down. Just another way of doing it.
- bare cleaned wire (literally cleaned to de-oxidize/prep)
- metal sleeve over wire
- crimp, hard
- solder as filler in areas of the crimp still exposed to air
- screw down this connection in spade/banana proper.
That’s one way to do it, and it is a way to do it that might last 20-30-40 years and need a bit of cleaning every now and then, if done with good mechanically and electrically connectors and the right metallic interfaces.
EG, neutrik speak-on connectors are supplied this way, parts wise.... and they expect you to commit to something similar to the above scenario. Users of speak-ons will do many times do this... but very few do the solder fill bit.
If your wire is inexpensive per foot, clean off about 2 inches or so of bare wire strands, then twist them so they are tightly packed and contacting each other, tie one end down and stretch out the other, solder soak that section that has wire to wire strand contact, then cut the excess end off, and have this stretch bit of solder and self-contacted strands (no wider than the original strands/set)....then insert the bulk soldered bit into the connector and screw that down. Just another way of doing it.