Dave wrote on 09/02/21 at 17:46:08:I am not sure you can buy the plug....and if you do how are you going to splice it in? The wires are crimped into the female/male connectors, and then those are retained in the connector.
If it was me.....I would cut the offending wires on both sides of the connector, and then take those wires and crimp on new "single" connectors for that wire. You are basically just connecting that wire without using the "10 pin yellow connector" as described by Ruttly.
The wires are crimped into the female/male connectors, and then those are retained in the connector
I've removed a bunch of those. Pretty finicky the first few times, but a good light and a tiny jewelers screwdriver and you can trip the clip and pull the wire and what it's crimped to.
If there is an unused pair you can pull those tiny bits and use them on the wires that are damaged.
Question is
What caused the problem and is it fixed or when you hook it up is there Goin to be a problem?
Or was that heat created by a resistive connection?