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		rparigor(at)SUFFOLK.LIB.N Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon Jan 05, 2009 3:10 pm    Post subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				Anyone have any thoughts on using Cool Amp on buss and other high amperage connections?http://www.cool-amp.com/It is a wipe on with damp cloth application.Ron Parigoris   [quote][b]
 
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		longg(at)pjm.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 8:47 am    Post subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				Ron,  
    
 Were you planning on installing a 230 kv transformer in your craft? This stuff is  for those big connectors that weld themselves shut when shorted. A dab of dielectric grease will do the same if needed for small applications like ours.  
      
 From: owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of rparigor(at)SUFFOLK.LIB.NY.US
  Sent: Monday, January 05, 2009 6:06 PM
  To: AeroelectricList
  Subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp?  
   
    
 Anyone have any thoughts on using Cool Amp on buss and other high amperage connections?
  
  http://www.cool-amp.com/
  
  It is a wipe on with damp cloth application.
  
  Ron Parigoris    	  | Quote: | 	 		  |   http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?AeroElectric-List  | 	  0123456789
       [quote][b]
 
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		rparigor(at)SUFFOLK.LIB.N Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 9:40 am    Post subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				Hi longg
 
 "Were you planning on installing a 230 kv transformer in your craft? This
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   stuff is  for those big connectors that weld themselves shut when
  shorted. A dab of dielectric grease will do the same if needed for small
  applications like ours."
 
 | 	  
 No the 230kv transformer will be used on my next flying project which will
 need to transform the tremendous amount of power coming out of next
 generation breadbox sized fuel cells!
 
 You refered to the wrong product I had in mind. I wanted to know about
 using the silver plating powder called:
 Cool-Amp Silver Plating Powder
 Part #1233-500
 
 that can be used in situation for increasing conductivity and help keep
 copper from corroding. Specific it is intended for:
 Cool-Amp Can Be Used On:
 Bus Bars - Cable Terminals - Current Transformers - Terminals - Clamps &
 Fittings
 
 Other Uses Include:
 Ham Radios - PCBs - Welders - Musical Instruments
 
 When used on PCBs I think it not only helps copper from corroding, but
 will help with high frequency transmissions.
 
 See:
 http://www.cool-amp.com/cool-amp.html
 
 Specific I was interested in using it for a connections in picture #28 and
 #31:
 http://www.europaowners.org/modules.php?set_albumName=album266&op=modload&name=gallery&file=index&include=view_album.php
 
 My friend has some Amp cool that he will lend me.
 
 Anyone have any comments on soldering to a silver plated piece of copper?
 If I were to do so, would it be worht it to use this solder from mcMaster
 that has a lower than 63-37 melting point (354F):
 Tin/Lead/Silver/Antimony with Rosin Flux— Composed of 62% tin, 35.75%
 lead, 2% silver, and 0.25% antimony. For use on silver-plated surfaces and
 heat-sensitive components and near previously soldered joints.
 
 You were talking about :
 Conducto-Lube
 
 Ron Parigoris
 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 4:23 pm    Post subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				At 05:05 PM 1/5/2009, you wrote:
   	  | Quote: | 	 		  Anyone have any thoughts on using Cool Amp on buss and other high amperage connections?
 
  http://www.cool-amp.com/
 
  It is a wipe on with damp cloth application. | 	  
    There's a host of elixers and potions intended to improve
    the quality of electrical connections . . . particularly
    those that are not permanently gas-tight (soldered/crimped).
    A few examples . . .
 
   http://www.stabilant.com.au/body_what_is_stabilant_22_.html
 
    http://urgentcomm.com/mag/radio_electrical_contact_enhancer/
 
    http://www.dedicatedaudio.com/inc/sdetail/19153
 
    http://www.positive-feedback.com/Issue17/xtremequicksilver.htm
 
   http://www.deoxit.com/
 
     Each of these products claims some capabilities to
     remove impediments to good connection (corrosion/
     contaminants), fill the voids between mating surfaces
     with some conductor usually in liquid suspension of
     some kind (silver flakes?), finally some feature that
     protects a made up joint from environmental attack.
 
     We had a processes guru look at several products while
     I was a Beech years ago.  Most of the products evaluated
     went to failures of manufacturing process. Consistency
     of manufacturing process is one of the reasons that
     crimped joints won out over soldered joints.  I forget
     how many different products were looked at but in the
     final analysis, the legacy processes that had evolved
     over decades of military and type certified experience
     was shown not to benefit from any of magic juices.
 
     I guess there was one exception . . . the Stabilant 22
     was evaluated by our brothers at Raytheon Mass and
     found useful for the rapidly disappearing gold fingers
     on card edges which were never very popular with the
     aircraft guys.
 
     Short answer is if the pieces are clean and then joined
     up gas-tight, there's no need for further treatment. 
 
  
         Bob . . .
 
         ----------------------------------------)
         ( . . .  a long habit of not thinking   )
         ( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
         ( appearance of being right . . .       )
         (                                       )
         (                  -Thomas Paine 1776-  )
         ----------------------------------------
 
      [quote][b]
 
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		rparigor(at)SUFFOLK.LIB.N Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 10:07 pm    Post subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				Hi BobThx. for the reply."> Short answer is if the pieces are clean and then joined > up gas-tight, there's no need for further treatment."Keeping my parts clean and creating an absolute gas tight seal using 6-32 screws to hold components together I think can be a challenge.The product I spoke of is simple pure silver plating. Do you see a problem depositing about 1/10,000 inch of pure silver on the areas of buss bar where it will meet tin plated terminals?Do you see a problem depositing about 1/10,000 inch of pure silver on the areas  of my .032" thick and .75" wide thin wire where it meet silver plated copper buss?Do you see a problem depositing about 1/10,000 inch of pure silver on the inside of my buss bypass (picture #31) so it will be ready to crimp, then solder to copper clad #4 aluminium wire?See pictures #31 to #34:http://www.europaowners.org/modules.php?set_albumName=album266&id=bb8&op=modload&name=gallery&file=index&include=view_photo.phpI fooled with soldering to silver plated copperand brass with 60-40 and 63-37 and it works great.I want to try a silver bearing solder: Tin/Lead/Silver/Antimony with Rosin Flux— Composed of 62% tin, 35.75% lead, 2% silver, and 0.25% antimony. For use on silver-plated surfaces and heat-sensitive components and near previously soldered joints. Meets Fed. Spec. QQ-S-571E and J-STD-006. this solder has a lower melting point than 63-37, and I believe becauers it has some silver, it will be easier on silver plating??Whats your thought on using this solder on silver plating?I think it will also be good for soldering surface mounted components that I need to do on occasion? It is 5 core rosin flux solder part #                                                                                                                      [url=javascript:TargetLink(\'TR983\',\'tr\',\'PT9831\',\'7687A63\');]7687A63[/url]                                                                                 from McMaster.Ron Parigoris   [quote][b]
 
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		echristley(at)nc.rr.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 07, 2009 6:01 am    Post subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				rparigor(at)SUFFOLK.LIB.NY.US wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   Do you see a problem depositing about 1/10,000 inch of pure silver on 
  the areas of buss bar where it will meet tin plated terminals?
 
 No.  And there is also no problem with spitting on it and polishing it 
 | 	  
 with your shirt tail.  They have the same efficacy, BTW.
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  
  Do you see a problem depositing about 1/10,000 inch of pure silver on 
  the inside of my buss bypass (picture #31) so it will be ready to 
  crimp, then solder to copper clad #4 aluminium wire?
 
 Polishing with a bit of 180 grit sandpaper or a pencil eraser would be a 
 | 	  
 better prep for crimping and soldering.  What is 1/10,00 of an inch of 
 pure anything supposed to do for you?  The copper is still showing 
 through, so you haven't sealed it from environmental oxygen.  Soldering 
 is an exercise is dissolving some lead/tin alloy in with the surface of 
 copper.  Your 1/10,000" layer of silver just becomes part of the mix.  A 
 little flux on the copper before the soldering is going to do more for 
 you and an permeable layer of silver dust.
 
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		rparigor(at)SUFFOLK.LIB.N Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 07, 2009 10:25 am    Post subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				Hi Ernest
 
 Thx. for the reply
 
 ">> Do you see a problem depositing about 1/10,000 inch of pure silver on
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  > the areas of buss bar where it will meet tin plated terminals?
 >
  No.  And there is also no problem with spitting on it and polishing it
  with your shirt tail.  They have the same efficacy, BTW."
 
 | 	  
 "The copper is still showing through, so you haven't sealed it from
 environmental oxygen."
 
 The pictures from the I-Phone did not do a very good job taking picture of
 a shiny object. There is no copper showing through, the silver in fact
 completely covered the copper.
 
 Copper in fact does corrode into a non conductive surface. Silver does not
 oxidize but will react with sulfides in the air and form silver sulfide,
 which is a bit unsightly, but none the less conductive.
 
 Why are terminals, terminal blocks and terminal block hardware plated?
 
 Are you saying that we would be just as well off using lets say ring
 terminals with no plating, just pure copper and sand contact area before
 application with 180 grit sandpaper, and the 180 grit sand marks are going
 to go away because you are going to tighten and mush both surfaces
 together with no chance that there are areas where the sand marks will
 allow corrosion to occur and creep into airtight sealed areas?? It's just
 a matter it's a greater amount of work to sand each contact area?
 
 Trying to understand.
 
 Sincerely
 Ron Parigoris
 
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		echristley(at)nc.rr.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed Jan 07, 2009 11:45 am    Post subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				rparigor(at)SUFFOLK.LIB.NY.US wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   
 
  Hi Ernest
 
  Thx. for the reply
 
  ">> Do you see a problem depositing about 1/10,000 inch of pure silver on
    
 >> the areas of buss bar where it will meet tin plated terminals?
 >>
 >>       
 > No.  And there is also no problem with spitting on it and polishing it
 > with your shirt tail.  They have the same efficacy, BTW."
 >     
 
  "The copper is still showing through, so you haven't sealed it from
  environmental oxygen."
 
  The pictures from the I-Phone did not do a very good job taking picture of
  a shiny object. There is no copper showing through, the silver in fact
  completely covered the copper.
 
    
 Believe it or not, your iPhone most likely did a better job of showing 
 | 	  
 the true state of affairs than your eyes 8*)  Our eyes tend to spread 
 shiny and make it appear to cover more area than it actually does.  It's 
 hard to "see through" the shiny.  That's why we test the silver coat on 
 our fabric with a light bulb. 
 
 Make a sample of copper scrap, coated halfway along the length.  Hang it 
 in your shower or other hot/humid environment for a few months.  If 
 there is anything more than minor differences in the corrosion rate, 
 I'll send you a new dollar. 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   Copper in fact does corrode into a non conductive surface. Silver does not
  oxidize but will react with sulfides in the air and form silver sulfide,
  which is a bit unsightly, but none the less conductive.
 
    
 Which would be a great argument for silver plating.  Real silver 
 | 	  
 plating.  Where ALL the copper is protected, not just enough to fool the 
 human eye into thinking that it is all covered.
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   Why are terminals, terminal blocks and terminal block hardware plated?
 
    
 It is cheap to have a machine do the plating in an industrial setting.  
 | 	  
 Much cheaper than even a few returned items due to a Chinese subsistence 
 day-laborers failing to tighten a screw properly.  Much cheaper than 
 having to have the day-laborer clean the contacts after they sat in a 
 humid warehouse for several years.  It is also prettier, and makes 
 storage and future changes less problematic (ie, you don't have to clean 
 the terminals every time you move wires around). 
 
 Still, there is a big difference between a process controlled plating 
 process, and wiping on some silver dust with a damp cloth.  There is a 
 lot of energy pumped into a plating machine to insure that the nickel is 
 properly bonded to the copper.  Where is the energy to make sure the 
 silver dust bonds?
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   Are you saying that we would be just as well off using lets say ring
  terminals with no plating, just pure copper and sand contact area before
  application with 180 grit sandpaper, and the 180 grit sand marks are going
  to go away because you are going to tighten and mush both surfaces
  together with no chance that there are areas where the sand marks will
  allow corrosion to occur and creep into airtight sealed areas?? It's just
  a matter it's a greater amount of work to sand each contact area?
    
 Yes.  But it is no more work than wiping on the magic potion.  Copper is 
 | 	  
 soft, and mushes easily.  Under the entire ring terminal, you only need 
 as much surface area to be in intimate contact as the cross-sectional 
 area of the wire to maintain the same line resistance.  Remove a few 
 properly torqued screw from plain copper ring terminals and see how much 
 deformation there is.  Hint: there' s a LOT.  Also note how the area 
 under the fastener is bright and shiny, while the outside edges are 
 gunky and corroded.  My rotary engine uses copper seals under banjo 
 fittings, because it will deform and seal up air tight.  Lycoming spark 
 plugs use a copper washer for the same reason.  No silver dust needed.
 
 Make no mistake.  I don't think the silver dust will do any harm.  But 
 from my experience, I can't believe that it is more than a tedious 
 exercise with no payback.
 
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		Eric M. Jones
 
  
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 565 Location: Massachusetts
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 8:13 am    Post subject: Re: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				Silver plating copper is not a good idea. See:
 
 http://www.hmwire.com/plating.html
 
 from the site:
 
 "Plating for Copper and Copper Alloys:
 
 Silver - ....When silver is plated over copper there can be an accelerated corrosion of the copper at pinholes or breaks in the silver plating. It is then susceptible to the formation of cuprous oxide when stored or used in a moist or high humidity environment. The corrosion is known as "red plague" and is identifiable by the presence of a brown-red powder deposit on the exposed copper...."
 
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  _________________ Eric M. Jones
 
www.PerihelionDesign.com
 
113 Brentwood Drive
 
Southbridge, MA 01550
 
(508) 764-2072
 
emjones(at)charter.net | 
			 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 9:31 am    Post subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				At 10:13 AM 1/8/2009, you wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  
 
 Silver plating copper is not a good idea. See:
 
 http://www.hmwire.com/plating.html
 
 from the site:
 
 Plating for Copper and Copper Alloys:
 
 Silver - ....When silver is plated over copper there can be an 
 accelerated corrosion of the copper at pinholes or breaks in the 
 silver plating. It is then susceptible to the formation of cuprous 
 oxide when stored or used in a moist or high humidity environment. 
 The corrosion is known as "red plague" and is identifiable by the 
 presence of a brown-red powder deposit on the exposed copper...."
 
 | 	  
     Which goes back to the simple-idea of "gas tightness"
     in a fabricated joint. To get corrosion you need an
     ingress location for an oxidizer (usually atmospheric
     oxygen but there are thousands of other oxidizing
     agents) usually dissolved in moisture.
 
     ALL pre-treatments one might incorporate for the
     purpose improving quality/longevity of a joint
     become moot when you mash and/or amalgam the two
     materials to be joined such that oxidizers and
     moisture are physically excluded from entering
     the joint.
 
     Probably the best thing one could do with bolted
     joint of less than pristine surfaces is wipe some
     silicone grease on one of the mating surfaces before
     mating. Any voids in the joint due to surface
     irregularities are prevented from being antagonistic
     havens for bad karma. At the same time, any place
     the two materials have been extruded a single
     piece of material, the pressures involve will
     squirt the grease out like toothpaste.
 
     Again, goops and goos pre-joining cannot replace
     or even do much to enhance good craftsmanship
     and preparation in making up the connection.
         Bob . . .
 
         ----------------------------------------)
         ( . . .  a long habit of not thinking   )
         ( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
         ( appearance of being right . . .       )
         (                                       )
         (                  -Thomas Paine 1776-  )
         ----------------------------------------
 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 2:16 pm    Post subject: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				 	  | Quote: | 	 		  Yes.  But it is no more work than wiping on the magic 
 potion.  Copper is soft, and mushes easily.  Under the entire ring 
 terminal, you only need as much surface area to be in intimate 
 contact as the cross-sectional area of the wire to maintain the same 
 line resistance.  Remove a few properly torqued screw from plain 
 copper ring terminals and see how much deformation there is.  Hint: 
 there' s a LOT.  Also note how the area under the fastener is bright 
 and shiny, while the outside edges are gunky and corroded.  My 
 rotary engine uses copper seals under banjo fittings, because it 
 will deform and seal up air tight.  Lycoming spark plugs use a 
 copper washer for the same reason.  No silver dust needed.
 
 Make no mistake.  I don't think the silver dust will do any 
 harm.  But from my experience, I can't believe that it is more than 
 a tedious exercise with no payback.
 
 | 	  
    YES! One of the points I hit on in the weekend
    seminars is the value of  force/area=pressure
    where the act of tightening a nut down on a malleable
    copper terminal literally deforms the surface to
    achieve "oneness" between mating surfaces.
 
    I like to tie a ground terminal down to the airframe
    with no smaller than a 8-32 fastener having a metal
    locknut to keep the pressure high over the lifetime
    of the joint.
 
    Once the joint is properly made, the vulnerabilities
    of time and environment are at the parting line which is
    very small and offers little risk of being breached.
    These are cases where physically squashing two items
    into intimate contact with each other is a good thing.
 
    Bob . . .
 
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		pilot4pay
 
  
  Joined: 01 Jan 2007 Posts: 171 Location: Louisville, KY
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				 Posted: Fri Jan 16, 2009 6:35 am    Post subject: Re: What's thoughts on Cool Amp? | 
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				While Bob and others have thoroughly covered the topic very well, I thought I might add personal experience with cool-amp.
 My job as an electrician for a major automobile manufacturer, I worked for most of my career in the body shops. We used cool-amp on resistance welding equipment connections. These connections, are subjected to current ranges from thousands to tens of thousands of amps of current.
 the necessity stems from the nature of the welding process. the "resistance" in resistance welding refers to the resistance of the junction of 2 or more body panels. that interface is measured in a few hundred micro-ohms, and passing huge ammounts of current through that small resistance generates the heat of fusion. The silver plating on the connections ensures that the heat is generated where we want a weld to take place, not , say at the transformer feeding weld gun.
 When repairs are made to connections, we would use the cool amp to re-plate a damaged connection. As maintenance budgets dwindled, the cool-amp ran out, we had to make repairs without it. What was important in the repaired connection became that the conductor connections surfaces needed to be as flat and clean as possible. as long as the mating surfaces were as high a quality as we could finish them, and tightened properly, they functioned just as well without the cool-amp.
 I highly doubt that cool-amp will add any measurable improvements in reliability for your home-builder applications. Save your money.
 
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  _________________ Craig Smith
 
CH640 builder
 
SN: 0078
 
 
"Just think how stupid the average person is,
 
and then realize that half of them are even stupider!"
 
--George Carlin | 
			 
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