In the supposed Age of Wireless our desks, TVs, living rooms and whole houses remain a viper’s nest of trailing, tangled, tense cables. Nowhere are these wires more massed than where you heap your device chargers for phone, tablet, camera, power banks, and even other chargers. There’s probably a knotty pair of old earbuds in there, too.
In our house this is a drawer in the kitchen (pictured above) once reserved for handy items such as corkscrews (yes, things to take out actual real corks) and foil cutters, non-standard cutlery and cocktail sticks. What days they were.
Now when said drawer is opened it’s like the scene in Raiders of the Lost Arc when Indy is thrown down into the Well Of Souls, writhing with snakes. Fighting through the knotty cables to the corkscrew requires a rolled up sleeve and several minutes of fighting through Lightning, Micro USB, Mini USB, 30-pin, and proprietary charging cables. Sometimes I even come across a FireWire 400 cable, which is then hastily pushed to the back of the drawer again.
Manufacturers hardly help. Fitbit, for example, has a different charging cable for each and every one of its six activity trackers. And all of them are non-standard and proprietary.
Apple is consolidating on Lightning but owners of older iPhones or iPads still have to fish out a 30-pin charger every now and again.
Mercifully many non-Apple products rely on the universal Micro USB cable, which means you can charge most devices with just a couple of these tucked away neatly.
So how do you tame this pit of charger cables?
Less cables, less clutter
First, reduce the numbers. Throw out any chargers or cables no longer attributed to anything useful in the house. That BlackBerry charger, for instance.Then ask yourself if you really need seven Micro USB cables? Two Lightning should be enough for most iPhone houses… and one 30-pin for the old iPad. Consign the others to landfill, or that bag of cables in the eaves of the loft that you dig through every five years when a neighbour pops round wondering if you have a power brick that would fit his old Sky DigiBox.
Now invest in some charger cables that feature more than one charging end. This could halve the number of cables to tame.
I bought some great ones from Amazon about a year ago but – damn it – can’t find them on sale there any more. They were nice and short (about 6 inches long), braided, and featured 3-in-1 Micro USB, Lightning and Apple 30-pin connectors – all in one neat (and colourful) package. Shame they’ve disappeared but I guess the 30-pin is becoming a bit of a legacy connector except for older iPads. Others remain on eBay and Amazon but check the user reviews as some are simply too cheap to be true.
Tylt has a neat charger cable called the Tylt Syncable-Duo, a 2-in-1 cable solution for charging and syncing data to smartphones and tablets. It’s equipped with both micro-USB and Apple Lightning connectors – great for Android Micro USB and Apple Lightning devices. Micro USB is on almost everything not made by Apple: battery cases, power banks, cameras, etc, so this is a great choice if you have at least one Apple device.
The tangle-free Syncable-Duo is available in four colours (black, blue, green and red) and lengths from 1 foot to 1 metre. They cost US$25 and will soon be available in the UK for £19.99.
For most purposes a short cable is fine and will reduce clutter. Even 1ft is too unweildy for me. As long as it reaches from the wall socket to the surface I’m happy. You can find 4-inch and 6-inch Micro USB and Lightning cables on Amazon.
Another neat way to kill cables is to move to Bluetooth headphones and Bluetooth speakers, and free up desk space with a wireless keyboard and mouse.
Lose the plugs, too
Unless you’re charging straight from a computer you’ll need a plug adaptor for all those cables.You can but a plug with more than one USB port. The £7 Foxnovo Portable 5V/2A Dual USB Output UK-plug features two – bingo, one less plug required.
I’ve also changed one of my power socket wall plates to include not just the two standard plug sockets but two USB slots too. I’d be wary of buying these off eBay or even Amazon, but reputable builders merchants such as Screwfix sell them for around £20. Read our USB wall plate review.
We're also fans of compact wall chargers such as the iClever (above), which features 6 USB ports. Read our iClever review and find it for £18.99 on Amazon.
Read our Best USB desktop chargers round up for more space-saving charger recommendations.
For £35 you can get the Olixar 6 USB USB IC Smart Charger (above), which offers faster charging than the iClever.
Pack cables away
Now you’ve cut back on the number and length of your charger cables, you need to tame them. We tested a bunch of cheap cable tidy organisers, and here’s our favourites.The simple, zipped Damai Universal Cable Organiser is a case made of waterproof nylon that will fit easily in any drawer or cupboard, or just as simply in your backpack or suitcase when travelling.
It features ten elastic loops to hold various cables, earbuds, and five mesh pockets for USB stick flash drives and so forth. As a bonus it comes with three reusable Velcro fastening cable ties, and zips up into a neat and tidy case you can slip out of sight.
The ButterFox Universal Cable Organizer is a smaller version that wraps up small, and so makes an even better travel companion. It uses a drawstring, rather than zip, to secure the wrap-up bag. Available from Amazon for £11.99, at the time of writing.
ButterFox also sells the equally lightweight but larger Universal Electronics Accessories Travel Organiser, a zipped carry case with handle that’s more suitable for bulkier items such as laptop chargers and power bricks. It would make a good organiser for travel plug adapters, mice, power banks and other items as well as the usual charger cables.
You can see through the mesh side, and there are two internal net pockets for accessories such as memory cards, USB drives, etc. Available from Amazon for £7.99, at the time of writing.




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