liquid tape the join and then shrink tube
You can also put silicone on the junction of the wires and once dry you put your heat-shrinkable sheath
Thanks for the info.
Had thought about using something like this so I can detach the mast from the board but they area a bit bulky

Here’s how i successfully used waterproof connectors that can also be disconnected anytime. See my build for details Florida Build - PM Based - #2 by sunrise305 - Builds - FOIL.zone
Thanks @sunrise305 I had actually also been looking in the last few days at a virtually identical item on ebay
Good to know you had some success with these type of connectors
Cheers,
Ramsay
Forum users have designed some clever waterproof 3D printed shells requiring minimum space, tested and provided with STL files
:
@Riwi XT150: The other way around - #27 by Riwi - Builds - FOIL.zone uses a threaded shell that needs some adjustments.
From @Gobbla
2019-01: _XT90 (OD 12 mm x 57mm long
) French build born in [LYON] - #51 by Gobbla - Builds - FOIL.zone no thread, just o-rings.
2019-08: XT150 (OD 14 mm x 70mm long
) French build born in [LYON] - #110 by Gobbla - Builds - FOIL.zone no thread, just o-rings.
Hello,
I need to lengthen my my motor wires since I hope to use a longer mast than my original build. My current motor wires are not long enough to exit the top of the longer mast.
I am thinking of using a 8 awg butt-splice to extend the motor wires. However I need the connection to be waterproof since the connection will be in the mast.
Any suggestions for a waterproof connection?
Initial ideas
- solder + conformal coat + shrink wrap?
- submersible 8 awg butt slices (I found some from Wirefy)
- should I encase the connection in epoxy?
- fill the mast up with closed cell foam?
I solder then put liquid silicone ( liquid tape) twice, then hot glue and warp or the shrinkwarp that comes with glue on the inside.
But i found that corrosion will inevitably comes around sooner or later. Check and redo occasionaly
You can buy waterproof shrinktube. It is coated on the inside.
Liquid tape is rubber, not silicone. Silicone is far superior for waterproofing connections. A better method:
- place marine silicone around solder joint.
- Shrink wrap the wet silicone
- wait 24 hrs for it to dry
I’ve done this and have connections that are over 3 years old that are still waterproof. The benefit is that if you use silicone cable the bond to the cable is permanent.
Wow. You make silicone stick to silicone! Magic.

Nice Trolling…
pls tell me how you do that, I am keen to learn
Yes?
If you do not already know which type of silicone your detail is made of,…
and here comes the problem
Yes, you’re right, could be tested though.
I’d think that cyanoacrylate and salt water won’t be the perfect match, platinum cure won’t work with the tin in the wires so that leaves moisture cure.
i’ve used liquid tape + shrink to seal the joints without issues for three years. I guess the joint with heat shrink protection is still good enough even if the liquid tape could probably be peeled off the silicone if you tried.
I simply use the shrink tube that is already coated with glue on the inside.
Yes, but hot melt doesn’t stay attached to the silicone, if you bend the cable it peels. At least the tests i’ve done showed liquid tape to be better. The hot melt adhesive in the heat shrink is relatively stiff compared to the liquid tape.
Thanks for the info
Is there a specific marine grade silicone you would suggest or recommend?