Re: Use of anti- oxident on aluminum wire
Every time that I have hooked up a heavy industrial machine with aluminum the aluminum wire was a 100% success story. The first time was a plastics machine with 60,000 watts of resistance heaters in it. It ran 24/7 except for Thanksgiving and Christmas. My wiring in aluminum ran cooler than than NEC said it should for the ambient temperature and the duty cycle. The duty cycle was 100% for half the heaters and about 95% for the other half during production. Because of rest and luch breaks there was enough cycling to loosen the connections. The copper wiring had amajor breakdown twice during the first 2 months of the machine's life.
I did this installation in October of 1987 right after the price of copper wire doubled. What I did was to clean all the wire strands with #220 silicon carbide paper and goop them up with Ilsco Deox(R). Ilsco Deox(R) had passed the 3 year salt spray test with copper wire on the starter motor on the car. 2 of those years involved commuting from Fairlawn, Ohio ( just west of Akron ) to John Carroll University (just east of Cleveland) On a full time academic schedule.I had read Dr. Jesse Aronstein's early work over at the library and had inherited a 1/2 inch stack of #220 silicon carbide paper from grandfather, so I decided that I could do this in aluminum.
There are some other issues such as overstripping the wire so as to have strand bending space and cutting off the sharp tips before cleaning the strands. For detailed directions go to
http://home/earthlink.net/~mc5w/aluminum&copperwiringconnections.txt . Dr. Jesse Aronstein's website is
www.inspect-ny.com . As a matter of scientific control he also tested copper to copper wiring connections.
If the aluminum wire is Stabiloy(R), anything that is wrong with it other than undersizing can be fixed with silicon carbide paper, elbow grease, and electrical grease. If it is the soft crap the Reynolds made, you need to replace it. However, Dr. Aronstein has shown that a wire brush is 100% INEFFECTIVE at removing aluminum oxide. You have to use silicon carbide abrasive paper and my own work has shown that garnet paper is alos effective if you use more elbow grease.
[ April 12, 2005, 02:23 AM: Message edited by: mc5w ]