A lot of that cordage on WW2 sets were made up of individual wires grouped together and tied off every 8 inches or so ( and not separated by color - all wires had white insulation on them.  If you can’t find the correct cords, you may have to go that rout. A pain in the butt.  
 
73
Mark D. 
WW2RDO

“In matters of style, float with the current. In matters of Principle, stand like a rock. “.   -   Thomas Jefferson 

Sent from my iPhone

On Apr 12, 2025, at 3:49 PM, Craig Cantwell via ARC5 <[email protected]> wrote:


Anyone have any books or manuals or catalogs that have information on CO-122 or CO-119 cordage? I need to figure out a modern replacement for both of these. The -122 is used on the T-17 hand mic's and the -119 is used with the RC-36 Interphone system in the airplane. I believe that the -122 is a 4 conductor with a rubberized cover. I'm not sure, but the -119 may be 8 conductor with a shield, but no clue on covering.

Craig
KF5JOT   
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