Why do you want to use dielectric grease? I would use a conductive grease for this. 73 Rob K5UJ _______________________________________________ Amps mailing list Amps@contesting.com http://lists.cont
I would imagine that conductive grease would create massive problems if there was any creep or spread of the product. 73 Rob K5UJ _______________________________________________ Amps mailing list Amp
There's a "dry" lubricant for that application. I believe it's teflon-moly - a duckduckgo Search should locate it. kd4e On 12/28/19 10:21 PM, Alek Petkovic wrote: I would imagine that > conductive gr
Conductive grease is usually grease impregnated with particles of silver. As such, it is expensive. Most users apply it minimally and sparingly, I doubt if Jim is so stupid that he'd inundate his rol
Im dubious about using conducting grease for roller inductors. Generally, Ive used a thin coating of dielectric silicone grease for that kind of application. The purpose is to lubricate the roller co
W8JI has a pretty good article about conductive vs dielectric grease on his website. It certainly cleared up the question for me. Google will take you there. Tom H K0SN ______________________________
See https://www.w8ji.com/dielectric_grease_vs_conductive_grease.htm for the full treatise. Bottom line is theconductive grease refers to its thermal, not electrical, characteristics. Kim N5OO "People
comments on qrz + qth. Conducto lube is 75% pure silver and 25% castor oil...... NO grease used. The silver plated edge wound roller + 1 inch square silver plated cu tube + end pieces, all use slidi
.Generally, Ive used a thin coating of dielectric silicone grease for That might be the case with a good roller inductor but in that case is any lube needed at all? Maybe in a remote assembly outdoo
It appears that W8JI didnt quite get his story correct. Silicone grease does not not decompose into Silicon Carbide, It decomposes into Silicon Dioxide + Hydrogen and/or Chlorine. There is no Carbon