Amazines Free Article Archive
www.amazines.com - Monday, May 13, 2024
Read about the most recent changes and happenings at Amazines.com
Log into your account or register as a new author. Start submitting your articles right now!
Search our database for articles.
Subscribe to receive articles emailed straight to your email account. You may choose multiple categories.
View our newest articles submitted by our authors.
View our most top rated articles rated by our visitors.
* Please note that this is NOT the ARTICLE manager
Add a new EZINE, or manage your EZINE submission.
Add fresh, free web content to your site such as newest articles, web tools, and quotes with a single piece of code!
Home What's New? Submit/Manage Articles Latest Posts Top Rated Article Search
Google
Subscriptions Manage Ezines
CATEGORIES
 Article Archive
 Advertising (133573)
 Advice (161671)
 Affiliate Programs (34799)
 Art and Culture (73857)
 Automotive (145712)
 Blogs (75615)
 Boating (9851)
 Books (17223)
 Buddhism (4130)
 Business (1330658)
 Business News (426453)
 Business Opportunities (366518)
 Camping (10973)
 Career (72795)
 Christianity (15848)
 Collecting (11638)
 Communication (115089)
 Computers (241954)
 Construction (38962)
 Consumer (49953)
 Cooking (17080)
 Copywriting (6733)
 Crafts (18203)
 Cuisine (7549)
 Current Affairs (20320)
 Dating (45907)
 EBooks (19703)
 E-Commerce (48258)
 Education (185523)
 Electronics (83524)
 Email (6438)
 Entertainment (159856)
 Environment (28973)
 Ezine (3040)
 Ezine Publishing (5454)
 Ezine Sites (1551)
 Family & Parenting (111009)
 Fashion & Cosmetics (196608)
 Female Entrepreneurs (11853)
 Feng Shui (134)
 Finance & Investment (310616)
 Fitness (106469)
 Food & Beverages (63046)
 Free Web Resources (7941)
 Gambling (30227)
 Gardening (25202)
 Government (10519)
 Health (630139)
 Hinduism (2206)
 Hobbies (44083)
 Home Business (91665)
 Home Improvement (251213)
 Home Repair (46246)
 Humor (4724)
 Import - Export (5459)
 Insurance (45104)
 Interior Design (29616)
 International Property (3488)
 Internet (191031)
 Internet Marketing (146687)
 Investment (22861)
 Islam (1161)
 Judaism (1352)
 Law (80507)
 Link Popularity (4596)
 Manufacturing (20914)
 Marketing (99318)
 MLM (14140)
 Motivation (18233)
 Music (27000)
 New to the Internet (9496)
 Non-Profit Organizations (4048)
 Online Shopping (129734)
 Organizing (7813)
 Party Ideas (11855)
 Pets (38165)
 Poetry (2229)
 Press Release (12689)
 Public Speaking (5643)
 Publishing (7566)
 Quotes (2407)
 Real Estate (126708)
 Recreation & Leisure (95495)
 Relationships (87674)
 Research (16182)
 Sales (80351)
 Science & Technology (110294)
 Search Engines (23514)
 Self Improvement (153300)
 Seniors (6220)
 Sexuality (36010)
 Small Business (49312)
 Software (83034)
 Spiritual (23517)
 Sports (116155)
 Tax (7663)
 Telecommuting (34070)
 Travel & Tourism (308306)
 UK Property Investment (3123)
 Video Games (13382)
 Web Traffic (11790)
 Website Design (56919)
 Website Promotion (36663)
 World News (1000+)
 Writing (35843)
Author Spotlight
ROBERT HOWARD

The Word of God is as, “Sweet as Honey”. God has Taken Me Through a Whole Lot of Things...more
CURTIS ENGLAND

I'm a full-time Writer, dreamer and chief executive manager. I write to release my true stories in t...more
MARTIN ADAM

Working in this organization from last 10 years. I did my graduation from the University of Texas, U...more
DESIGNPLUZ DIGITALAGENCY

Designpluz has steadily matured from a passionate graphics design start-up, into a full service digi...more
ELLIOT CHANG

Financial analyst and author writing on economy and business. ...more


Cable Assemblies are the Safe and Practical Way to Tidy Up Your Office Space by saif ali





Article Author Biography
Cable Assemblies are the Safe and Practical Way to Tidy Up Your Office Space by
Article Posted: 11/19/2011
Article Views: 446
Articles Written: 18
Word Count: 3391
Article Votes: 0
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Cable Assemblies are the Safe and Practical Way to Tidy Up Your Office Space


 
Internet
Wires, wires, wires. Everywhere we go in this modern world they are there. They are the overgrowing vines of the urban jungle. The arteries delivering binary bursts of data and news to the pumping heart of the digital revolution. They are also very, very annoying. Or, at least, they can be. We trip over them. They get them tangled. When setting up a desktop computer or television set, many of us just end up shoving them down the back of the desk in an untidy mess; mortgaging our futures and trying not to think of when we’ll have to repay it by fighting through those wires the next time we want to plug in a printer or change monitors. Bespoke cable assemblies (also known as cable harnesses, wire harnesses or wiring looms) help us tidy up this clutter; pinning back the vines so they are an easily managed feature and not an overgrowing mess.

Cable assemblies are usually made by hand, binding together a number of wires and cables with clamps, electrical tapes or sleeves. This allows multiple wires to be laid along the same path at the same time. Nowadays, they are commonly used in all sorts of context. They are often to be found in cars and automobiles, where a large number of wires have been fitted into a relatively small space. They are also used in computer rooms and server stacks, where there isn’t necessarily such a shortage of space, but where the sheer quantity of cables and wires about the place means that grouping together those performing related tasks can make organising the whole mess a lot easier.

The benefits of using cable assemblies do not end with optimising your space and helping to keep your cables organised. Binding cables together offers increased resilience. They are better secured against vibrations and abrasions; the combined strength of the bound cables gives them a shared strength akin to corded string. Cable assemblies also allow the cables to be easily bound up and away from potential areas of moisture or heat which might damage them: this can of course be done with single wires as well, but a cable assembly makes the job a lot quicker.

As the cables cannot flex so freely, the insulating sleeve about each one is less likely to become torn or to perish. This reduces the risk of shorts - because bare wires are less likely to be exposed to each other - and thus of resulting dangers, such as power outages and electrical fires. Cable assemblies can also be fitted inside a further, single insulating sleeve, further reducing the risk of power shorts and (if the sleeve is flame retardant) of electrical fires.

Cable assemblies are also a sensible safety precaution. Wires and cables are a notorious trip hazard. A cable assembly binds several wires together, meaning there is now only one obstacle where there were once six or seven, and one which can be easily secured or tidied away. In busy offices, classrooms or IT rooms, it also allows for the quick and simple routing of power cables to one power outlet.

Cable assemblies take far less time to install than a myriad of individual wires and cables, cutting down on the labour costs of installation. It also means jobs requiring an electrician can be easily standardised. Wires may be a necessary part of our digital world, but they don’t have to be a problem. Cable assemblies are more aesthetically pleasing, practical and safe. Bind your wires and tame the urban jungle.

">Cable assemblies are usually made by hand, binding together a number of wires and cables with clamps, electrical tapes or sleeves. This allows multiple wires to be laid along the same path at the same time. Nowadays, they are commonly used in all sorts of context. They are often to be found in cars and automobiles, where a large number of wires have been fitted into a relatively small space. They are also used in computer rooms and server stacks, where there isn’t necessarily such a shortage of space, but where the sheer quantity of cables and wires about the place means that grouping together those performing related tasks can make organising the whole mess a lot easier.

The benefits of using cable assemblies do not end with optimising your space and helping to keep your cables organised. Binding cables together offers increased resilience. They are better secured against vibrations and abrasions; the combined strength of the bound cables gives them a shared strength akin to corded string. Cable assemblies also allow the cables to be easily bound up and away from potential areas of moisture or heat which might damage them: this can of course be done with single wires as well, but a cable assembly makes the job a lot quicker.

As the cables cannot flex so freely, the insulating sleeve about each one is less likely to become torn or to perish. This reduces the risk of shorts - because bare wires are less likely to be exposed to each other - and thus of resulting dangers, such as power outages and electrical fires. Cable assemblies can also be fitted inside a further, single insulating sleeve, further reducing the risk of power shorts and (if the sleeve is flame retardant) of electrical fires.

Cable assemblies are also a sensible safety precaution. Wires and cables are a notorious trip hazard. A cable assembly binds several wires together, meaning there is now only one obstacle where there were once six or seven, and one which can be easily secured or tidied away. In busy offices, classrooms or IT rooms, it also allows for the quick and simple routing of power cables to one power outlet.

Cable assemblies take far less time to install than a myriad of individual wires and cables, cutting down on the labour costs of installation. It also means jobs requiring an electrician can be easily standardised. Wires may be a necessary part of our digital world, but they don’t have to be a problem. Cable assemblies are more aesthetically pleasing, practical and safe. Bind your wires and tame the urban jungle.

">Wires, wires, wires. Everywhere we go in this modern world they are there. They are the overgrowing vines of the urban jungle. The arteries delivering binary bursts of data and news to the pumping heart of the digital revolution. They are also very, very annoying. Or, at least, they can be. We trip over them. They get them tangled. When setting up a desktop computer or television set, many of us just end up shoving them down the back of the desk in an untidy mess; mortgaging our futures and trying not to think of when we’ll have to repay it by fighting through those wires the next time we want to plug in a printer or change monitors. Bespoke cable assemblies (also known as cable harnesses, wire harnesses or wiring looms) help us tidy up this clutter; pinning back the vines so they are an easily managed feature and not an overgrowing mess.

Cable assemblies are usually made by hand, binding together a number of wires and cables with clamps, electrical tapes or sleeves. This allows multiple wires to be laid along the same path at the same time. Nowadays, they are commonly used in all sorts of context. They are often to be found in cars and automobiles, where a large number of wires have been fitted into a relatively small space. They are also used in computer rooms and server stacks, where there isn’t necessarily such a shortage of space, but where the sheer quantity of cables and wires about the place means that grouping together those performing related tasks can make organising the whole mess a lot easier.

The benefits of using cable assemblies do not end with optimising your space and helping to keep your cables organised. Binding cables together offers increased resilience. They are better secured against vibrations and abrasions; the combined strength of the bound cables gives them a shared strength akin to corded string. Cable assemblies also allow the cables to be easily bound up and away from potential areas of moisture or heat which might damage them: this can of course be done with single wires as well, but a cable assembly makes the job a lot quicker.

As the cables cannot flex so freely, the insulating sleeve about each one is less likely to become torn or to perish. This reduces the risk of shorts - because bare wires are less likely to be exposed to each other - and thus of resulting dangers, such as power outages and electrical fires. Cable assemblies can also be fitted inside a further, single insulating sleeve, further reducing the risk of power shorts and (if the sleeve is flame retardant) of electrical fires.

Cable assemblies are also a sensible safety precaution. Wires and cables are a notorious trip hazard. A cable assembly binds several wires together, meaning there is now only one obstacle where there were once six or seven, and one which can be easily secured or tidied away. In busy offices, classrooms or IT rooms, it also allows for the quick and simple routing of power cables to one power outlet.

Cable assemblies take far less time to install than a myriad of individual wires and cables, cutting down on the labour costs of installation. It also means jobs requiring an electrician can be easily standardised. Wires may be a necessary part of our digital world, but they don’t have to be a problem. Cable assemblies are more aesthetically pleasing, practical and safe. Bind your wires and tame the urban jungle.

">Cable assemblies are also a sensible safety precaution. Wires and cables are a notorious trip hazard. A cable assembly binds several wires together, meaning there is now only one obstacle where there were once six or seven, and one which can be easily secured or tidied away. In busy offices, classrooms or IT rooms, it also allows for the quick and simple routing of power cables to one power outlet.

Cable assemblies take far less time to install than a myriad of individual wires and cables, cutting down on the labour costs of installation. It also means jobs requiring an electrician can be easily standardised. Wires may be a necessary part of our digital world, but they don’t have to be a problem. Cable assemblies are more aesthetically pleasing, practical and safe. Bind your wires and tame the urban jungle.

">Wires, wires, wires. Everywhere we go in this modern world they are there. They are the overgrowing vines of the urban jungle. The arteries delivering binary bursts of data and news to the pumping heart of the digital revolution. They are also very, very annoying. Or, at least, they can be. We trip over them. They get them tangled. When setting up a desktop computer or television set, many of us just end up shoving them down the back of the desk in an untidy mess; mortgaging our futures and trying not to think of when we’ll have to repay it by fighting through those wires the next time we want to plug in a printer or change monitors. Bespoke cable assemblies (also known as cable harnesses, wire harnesses or wiring looms) help us tidy up this clutter; pinning back the vines so they are an easily managed feature and not an overgrowing mess.

Cable assemblies are usually made by hand, binding together a number of wires and cables with clamps, electrical tapes or sleeves. This allows multiple wires to be laid along the same path at the same time. Nowadays, they are commonly used in all sorts of context. They are often to be found in cars and automobiles, where a large number of wires have been fitted into a relatively small space. They are also used in computer rooms and server stacks, where there isn’t necessarily such a shortage of space, but where the sheer quantity of cables and wires about the place means that grouping together those performing related tasks can make organising the whole mess a lot easier.

The benefits of using cable assemblies do not end with optimising your space and helping to keep your cables organised. Binding cables together offers increased resilience. They are better secured against vibrations and abrasions; the combined strength of the bound cables gives them a shared strength akin to corded string. Cable assemblies also allow the cables to be easily bound up and away from potential areas of moisture or heat which might damage them: this can of course be done with single wires as well, but a cable assembly makes the job a lot quicker.

As the cables cannot flex so freely, the insulating sleeve about each one is less likely to become torn or to perish. This reduces the risk of shorts - because bare wires are less likely to be exposed to each other - and thus of resulting dangers, such as power outages and electrical fires. Cable assemblies can also be fitted inside a further, single insulating sleeve, further reducing the risk of power shorts and (if the sleeve is flame retardant) of electrical fires.

Cable assemblies are also a sensible safety precaution. Wires and cables are a notorious trip hazard. A cable assembly binds several wires together, meaning there is now only one obstacle where there were once six or seven, and one which can be easily secured or tidied away. In busy offices, classrooms or IT rooms, it also allows for the quick and simple routing of power cables to one power outlet.

Cable assemblies take far less time to install than a myriad of individual wires and cables, cutting down on the labour costs of installation. It also means jobs requiring an electrician can be easily standardised. Wires may be a necessary part of our digital world, but they don’t have to be a problem. Cable assemblies are more aesthetically pleasing, practical and safe. Bind your wires and tame the urban jungle.

">Cable assemblies are usually made by hand, binding together a number of wires and cables with clamps, electrical tapes or sleeves. This allows multiple wires to be laid along the same path at the same time. Nowadays, they are commonly used in all sorts of context. They are often to be found in cars and automobiles, where a large number of wires have been fitted into a relatively small space. They are also used in computer rooms and server stacks, where there isn’t necessarily such a shortage of space, but where the sheer quantity of cables and wires about the place means that grouping together those performing related tasks can make organising the whole mess a lot easier.

The benefits of using cable assemblies do not end with optimising your space and helping to keep your cables organised. Binding cables together offers increased resilience. They are better secured against vibrations and abrasions; the combined strength of the bound cables gives them a shared strength akin to corded string. Cable assemblies also allow the cables to be easily bound up and away from potential areas of moisture or heat which might damage them: this can of course be done with single wires as well, but a cable assembly makes the job a lot quicker.

As the cables cannot flex so freely, the insulating sleeve about each one is less likely to become torn or to perish. This reduces the risk of shorts - because bare wires are less likely to be exposed to each other - and thus of resulting dangers, such as power outages and electrical fires. Cable assemblies can also be fitted inside a further, single insulating sleeve, further reducing the risk of power shorts and (if the sleeve is flame retardant) of electrical fires.

Cable assemblies are also a sensible safety precaution. Wires and cables are a notorious trip hazard. A cable assembly binds several wires together, meaning there is now only one obstacle where there were once six or seven, and one which can be easily secured or tidied away. In busy offices, classrooms or IT rooms, it also allows for the quick and simple routing of power cables to one power outlet.

Cable assemblies take far less time to install than a myriad of individual wires and cables, cutting down on the labour costs of installation. It also means jobs requiring an electrician can be easily standardised. Wires may be a necessary part of our digital world, but they don’t have to be a problem. Cable assemblies are more aesthetically pleasing, practical and safe. Bind your wires and tame the urban jungle.

">Wires, wires, wires. Everywhere we go in this modern world they are there. They are the overgrowing vines of the urban jungle. The arteries delivering binary bursts of data and news to the pumping heart of the digital revolution. They are also very, very annoying. Or, at least, they can be. We trip over them. They get them tangled. When setting up a desktop computer or television set, many of us just end up shoving them down the back of the desk in an untidy mess; mortgaging our futures and trying not to think of when we’ll have to repay it by fighting through those wires the next time we want to plug in a printer or change monitors. Bespoke cable assemblies (also known as cable harnesses, wire harnesses or wiring looms) help us tidy up this clutter; pinning back the vines so they are an easily managed feature and not an overgrowing mess.

Cable assemblies are usually made by hand, binding together a number of wires and cables with clamps, electrical tapes or sleeves. This allows multiple wires to be laid along the same path at the same time. Nowadays, they are commonly used in all sorts of context. They are often to be found in cars and automobiles, where a large number of wires have been fitted into a relatively small space. They are also used in computer rooms and server stacks, where there isn’t necessarily such a shortage of space, but where the sheer quantity of cables and wires about the place means that grouping together those performing related tasks can make organising the whole mess a lot easier.

The benefits of using cable assemblies do not end with optimising your space and helping to keep your cables organised. Binding cables together offers increased resilience. They are better secured against vibrations and abrasions; the combined strength of the bound cables gives them a shared strength akin to corded string. Cable assemblies also allow the cables to be easily bound up and away from potential areas of moisture or heat which might damage them: this can of course be done with single wires as well, but a cable assembly makes the job a lot quicker.

As the cables cannot flex so freely, the insulating sleeve about each one is less likely to become torn or to perish. This reduces the risk of shorts - because bare wires are less likely to be exposed to each other - and thus of resulting dangers, such as power outages and electrical fires. Cable assemblies can also be fitted inside a further, single insulating sleeve, further reducing the risk of power shorts and (if the sleeve is flame retardant) of electrical fires.

Cable assemblies are also a sensible safety precaution. Wires and cables are a notorious trip hazard. A cable assembly binds several wires together, meaning there is now only one obstacle where there were once six or seven, and one which can be easily secured or tidied away. In busy offices, classrooms or IT rooms, it also allows for the quick and simple routing of power cables to one power outlet.

Cable assemblies take far less time to install than a myriad of individual wires and cables, cutting down on the labour costs of installation. It also means jobs requiring an electrician can be easily standardised. Wires may be a necessary part of our digital world, but they don’t have to be a problem. Cable assemblies are more aesthetically pleasing, practical and safe. Bind your wires and tame the urban jungle.

Related Articles - Cable, assemblies,

Email this Article to a Friend!

Receive Articles like this one direct to your email box!
Subscribe for free today!

 Rate This Article  
Completely useless, should be removed from directory.
Minimal useful information.
Decent and informative.
Great article, very informative and helpful.
A 'Must Read'.

 

Do you Agree or Disagree? Have a Comment? POST IT!

 Reader Opinions 
Submit your comments and they will be posted here.
Make this comment or to the Author only:
Name:
Email:
*Your email will NOT be posted. This is for administrative purposes only.
Comments: *Your Comments WILL be posted to the AUTHOR ONLY if you select PRIVATE and to this PUBLIC PAGE if you select PUBLIC, so write accordingly.
 
Please enter the code in the image:



 Author Login 
LOGIN
Register for Author Account

 

Advertiser Login

 

ADVERTISE HERE NOW!
   Limited Time $60 Offer!
   90  Days-1.5 Million Views  

 

Great Paranormal Romance


TIM FAY

After 60-plus years of living, I am just trying to pass down some of the information that I have lea...more
GENE MYERS

Author of four books and two screenplays; frequent magazine contributor. I have four other books "in...more
LAURA JEEVES

At LeadGenerators, we specialise in content-led Online Marketing Strategies for our clients in the t...more
ALEX BELSEY

I am the editor of QUAY Magazine, a B2B publication based in the South West of the UK. I am also the...more
SUSAN FRIESEN

Located in the lower mainland of B.C., Susan Friesen is a visionary brand strategist, entrepreneur, ...more
STEVERT MCKENZIE

Stevert Mckenzie, Travel Enthusiast. ...more
STEPHEN BYE

Steve Bye is currently a fiction writer, who published his first novel, ‘Looking Forward Through the...more
SHALINI MITTAL

A postgraduate in Fashion Technology. Shalini is a writer at heart! Writing for her is an expression...more
ADRIAN JOELE

I have been involved in nutrition and weight management for over 12 years and I like to share my kn...more
JAMES KENNY

James is a Research Enthusiast that focuses on the understanding of how things work and can be impro...more

HomeLinksAbout UsContact UsTerms of UsePrivacy PolicyFAQResources
Copyright © 2024, All rights reserved.
Some pages may contain portions of text relating to certain topics obtained from wikipedia.org under the GNU FDL license