I always solder if I can, I've just found it more reliable.
I've gotten away from heat shrink in the last few years though, especially for trail repairs. I still heat shrink some things when I'm working at home.
Now I carry a roll of self fusing silicon tape that works a lot better for me and is a lot easier to use. The stuff is pretty good.
Dunno how it is for lasting 10 years without breaking down, but the splices I've done 3 years ago are still great.
It's a soft and very flexible and stretchy tape with no adhesive and has to have a seperator sheet on the roll. It literally fuses to itself on contact so if you stretch it as you wrap it around a splice it seals tighter than most heatshrinks I've used and fuses into one piece you have to cut off to remove.
I've gotten away from heat shrink in the last few years though, especially for trail repairs. I still heat shrink some things when I'm working at home.
Now I carry a roll of self fusing silicon tape that works a lot better for me and is a lot easier to use. The stuff is pretty good.
Dunno how it is for lasting 10 years without breaking down, but the splices I've done 3 years ago are still great.
It's a soft and very flexible and stretchy tape with no adhesive and has to have a seperator sheet on the roll. It literally fuses to itself on contact so if you stretch it as you wrap it around a splice it seals tighter than most heatshrinks I've used and fuses into one piece you have to cut off to remove.