Every single instructional video I've seen has instructed me to cut hundreds of pieces of tabbing wire and solder each cell one at a time. It's so easy to make and practically a no-brainer so I'm wondering why I haven't seen this kind of thing in a DIY video. I think it will work but would like input from you guys. Is it ok or even good to construct the whole string with two continuous lengths of tabbing wire?
Mike helped me out by telling me to use a real iron instead of a soldering gun and when I tried that, I can solder fast enough that I can see a slow moving wave of melted solder move along the wire in front of my iron as I go. It goes pretty quick. I have my iron set to 45 watts but mileage may vary. I can do one string in about five minutes.
BTW, if for some reason one has to be hooked to the other, to the other, the jig will still work, just not as fast a process.
I'm also using it to assemble all the cells I did separately, before I built the jig.

( this one works much better than my george foreman cell machine idea
ha )
- No cutting hundreds of pieces of tab wire.
- Construct an entire string of cells at once with just a few steps.
- You only need a board, a staple gun, a jigsaw, ruler, drill, and some rubber bands.
- Lay your cells out alternating pos and neg as seen in pic.
- Pull tab wire out past the cells for as long as you want.
(I use rubber bands for a stays at either end. Not seen in pic) - Solder either pos or negative cells, not all of them in this step.
- Cut spool end of tabbing wire where you want.
- Lift soldered cells out by wire or however works for you, flip the assembly over and put it back down.
- Solder the cells you didn't do in step 3.
Mike helped me out by telling me to use a real iron instead of a soldering gun and when I tried that, I can solder fast enough that I can see a slow moving wave of melted solder move along the wire in front of my iron as I go. It goes pretty quick. I have my iron set to 45 watts but mileage may vary. I can do one string in about five minutes.
BTW, if for some reason one has to be hooked to the other, to the other, the jig will still work, just not as fast a process.
I'm also using it to assemble all the cells I did separately, before I built the jig.
( this one works much better than my george foreman cell machine idea
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