Had an old Wahl just die after probably a good 20+ years, kind of looks like the cable is frayed and splitting where it connects to the trimmer. Did a quick check online and the new products don't even look remotely similar.
Just using it for normal hair cuts at home, any recommendations?
People often lament that things these days don't last as long as they used to, but they forget that our grandparents were constantly mending clothing, repairing electronics, etc.
I did this with a similarly old and heavily used Philips trimmer and it has lasted a good few years since. The Wahl ones are handy enough to take apart if memory serves so if you can I would also recommend going this route.
If you can get the casing off and post pics I'd be happy to offer advice if it's not something you're comfortable with.
Probably the best option. If it's last 20 years, it can probably do another 20. And anything you find currently on the market will struggle to beat that.
Inside the trimmer, it really does look more simple when you open it up. Let's say I can just cut the wire down a bit with scissors and then strip a bit of the cable plastic. Then the points I'm uncertain on would be:
The rubbery fitting that surrounds the wires and secures it to the main housing. Doesn't feel like there would be any way to yank out existing cable and thread through the unbroken part.
Little gold-ish pieces that pinch the wire and connect it to the screws. Look somewhat difficult to pry open.
I am located in the US but not sure which prong is which since the cable is quite twisty and the broken part is on the trimmer side.
Pic looks good. Probably the best option is to trim that cord a little past that break, remove the broken section, and insert the trimmed cord and reattach it to the trimmer. This will probably require soldering, and will definitely require opening the case. A picture of the trimmer with any visible screws shown will help to determine how feasible this is. You will require some solder, a soldering iron, and some flux. If you haven't done soldering before, this could be the most forgiving project to learn it on. Electrical soldering is pretty easy, electronics are fairly precise.
The picture came thru great, and I think that's fixable. A couple starting questions are: can the trimmer be easily opened up/ are there obvious screws keeping the housing together? Is the plug polarized? if you're in the US this means one of the prongs of the plug is larger than the other.
Edit: i'm gonna try and find a video tutorial or something on this as I think explaining via forum post might be kinda cumbersome, but I am down to try and help you through it.
I looked, and I couldn't find any. It's all Chinese brands now with no repairability. I bought a Phillips because it had a lot of features and it was cheap. When the battery dies, I can still use it corded. I do need to find some grease though so that the plastic motor nub doesn't grind away too quick.
Wahl got bought out years ago. Super cheap and shitty product all around. Chipped clipper blades, cheap plastic especially internals, dull loud blades. Avoid.
Forgot: Philips is the same. Avoid both.