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Re: [tlug] Connecting Conductors
Jim wrote:
[LHS] As a conductor that needs to conduct through physically touching another
separate material (as opposed to internal conduction), wouldn't the
oxidation of silver be an issue?
Oxidation is an issue for most conductive metals and there are
plenty of solutions to cope with oxidation in electrical
connections such as mechanical cleaning, fluxes, filling gap with
corrosion inhibitor, soldering, welding, crimping or plating with
omething that doesn't tarnish.
Silver tarnish isn't hard to deal with.
Aluminum oxide is _nasty_. Even so, the joints in electrical
transmission lines are fused with high pressure crimps.
I.e., just brute strength. [Etc.]
Thank for taking the time to explain. I do feel humbled and about three
inches tall (seriously - for how I feel that is - not the actual
height). As for my mistaken belief about gold, you're probably right -
I must have remembered it wrong. I hope I did, because my electronics
teacher I still have a great deal of respect for, so I hope he wasn't
wrong. But he was also one of the autoshop teachers with a strong
streak of mechanic in him, so I think (hope, imagine?) that the issue at
the time was one of mechanically laying one conductor upon another and
then I suppose gold provides a good surface for a good connection? I
know I recently had trouble with my old DVD player that began paying
only in black and white. I pulled out the video connection (S-type) and
plugged it in and out a few times to clean the contacts, which fixed the
black and white playback issue and it's been playing in color since
then. The cord is a cheap one with pins that have oxidized. The gold
coated plugs I have seem to stay in perpetually good condition, which
reinforced my gold belief. Now, <sniff>, I'll never be able to look at
gold the same... <sniff-sniff>.
Thanks again for the enlightenment,
Lyle
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