Date: Sat, 27 Jul 2013 17:23:05 +0000
From: Manfred Mornhinweg <manfred@ludens.cl>
To: amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] Glass Tape
Hi,
> Glass tape usually turns to dust in UV sunlight.
I think Carl means that glass fiber reinforced, plastic adhesive tape.
That stuff indeed turns to dust rather quickly. Dust with loosely
embedded glass fibers. Even when used indoors, in dry climates the glue
crumbles rather soon, in my experience.
But I'm under the impression that Ed means a different material, one
that is just glass fiber fabric, without any plastic or glue in it. Is
that right? Such a material should survive UV without trouble.
For winding baluns, I use one of two different techniques to avoid the
wire insulation chafing through. One is to wind the balun with
plastic-insulated wire, with the insulation being thick and hard enough
that it won't puncture. Common THHN house wiring stuff is fine. It also
gives me more confidence when working under high power, elevated SWR
conditions, when the voltage between wires can reach the kilovolt level.
The other technique is to wrap the core, but instead of glass tape, I
use several layers of black vinyl insulating tape. This tape MUST be
good quality. Since about 30 years I use Scotch Super 33+, and I can
fully recommend it. There must be other good tapes available, but when I
tried, this was the one that worked best among all the ones I tried, and
as long as it is available, I see no reason to search for another! I
have some antennas that are over 20 years old, fully exposed to the
weather, with this tape used in several locations, and it's still fine!
I have read lots of warning about using PVC in RF fields. This
insulating tape, and most plastic wire insulations, are PVC. So I was
always a bit scared that something terrible might happen, like an
insulation meltdown, but so far it hasn't. I wouldn't use a thin sheet
of PVC as a capacitor dielectric, but in the form of wire insulation or
a toroid core wrap it seems to do fine enough.
Black is best, for the wire insulation too. It blocks UV and largely
prevents degradation beyond the surface layer of a plastic.
Manfred
## Good to know Manfred. BTW, 88 tape and 33 tape are one and the same.
The only difference is the thickness. Forget which one is thicker, I think
it’s the 88 tape...
which just has less feet on a roll. Both are readily available at any home
depot that I have
been into. They come in a plastic tub with lid. They stack em vertical in a
display case,
and are removed from the bottom. After trying every other brand out there,
88 + 33 tape are superb.
Jim VE7RF
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