Those stragglers are what really frost me.
If you will tin the wires you won't have any stragglers.
See that white can of brown stuff in the following pic? That's rosin paste flux. I also have a small 'eyedropper' bottle of liquid flux.
EVERY wire that I strip will be dipped in that rosin and immediately tinned. This is a habit. I don't shortcut this step. Tinning does several things for you. The few seconds it takes is well worth the effort. Not only does tinning hold all the strands together as one solid wire, it also cleans the wire and prepares it to be easily soldered to whatever with a minimum of heat time and additional solder. All the wire on the board in that pic have been cut to length, stripped, and tinned, and the board is now ready to install. Just connect the wires to the sockets and the solder will flow like melted butter on those gold plated Cinch socket pins.
There are times that I cannot dip the end of a freshly stripped wire in the can of rosin. For those times, I will either use a toothpick to take a little paste to the wire or I'll use the 'eyedropper' bottle to put a drop of liquid flux on the wire. Regardless of the method used,
I TIN EVERY WIRE. Sure, it takes time. Is it worth it? I think so. So does the Air Force. So does NASA.
