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#1
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I have some questions regarding swaging stainless steel a/c cable with
nicopress sleeves. Specifically, several sources I've seen say that zinc plated copper sleeves should be used on SS cable (I.e. 28-2-G for 3/32" cable). Many suppliers that I know of sell SS cable and the zinc plated sleeves, so presumeably there are a lot of aircraft out there rigged with these sleeves. However, National Telephone (www.nicopress.com) appears to require a special tin plated copper sleeve be used for swaging SS cable ends instead (i.e. 428-3-VG for 3/32" applications). This one appears to be harder to find among various suppliers (though I havn't really looked that hard yet). My questions a - what is the hazard of using the wrong sleeve on SS cable: is it a strength or corrosion issue (or both)? - what's the real story anyway? I.e. are the zinc plated copper sleeves or even bare copper OK on SS cable, or ? - where's a good source for the tin plated ones in the event that's required? I have some SS cables I made up with regular copper sleeves and am trying to assess when I need to remake them with the correct sleeves (i.e. immediately or when I get the materials). They appear to be as strong as the galvanized cable ends I've made elsewhere so there's no immediate problem that I can see. But I do want to know what the correct sleeve is to be used, at which time I do plan to remake the cables... Thanks, LS N646F |
#2
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my murphy rebel kit shipped with plain copper sleeves. that's what I
used and the inspector passed it. AFAIK it's a corrosion issue as plating can't offer any measurable strength. I have some questions regarding swaging stainless steel a/c cable with nicopress sleeves. Specifically, several sources I've seen say that zinc plated copper sleeves should be used on SS cable (I.e. 28-2-G for 3/32" cable). Many suppliers that I know of sell SS cable and the zinc plated sleeves, so presumeably there are a lot of aircraft out there rigged with these sleeves. However, National Telephone (www.nicopress.com) appears to require a special tin plated copper sleeve be used for swaging SS cable ends instead (i.e. 428-3-VG for 3/32" applications). This one appears to be harder to find among various suppliers (though I havn't really looked that hard yet). My questions a - what is the hazard of using the wrong sleeve on SS cable: is it a strength or corrosion issue (or both)? - what's the real story anyway? I.e. are the zinc plated copper sleeves or even bare copper OK on SS cable, or ? - where's a good source for the tin plated ones in the event that's required? I have some SS cables I made up with regular copper sleeves and am trying to assess when I need to remake them with the correct sleeves (i.e. immediately or when I get the materials). They appear to be as strong as the galvanized cable ends I've made elsewhere so there's no immediate problem that I can see. But I do want to know what the correct sleeve is to be used, at which time I do plan to remake the cables... Thanks, LS N646F |
#3
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This is from High School chemistry and that was a LONG
time ago. I agree that it will be a corrosion issue. When water enters such a joint two different metals make up a battery. This can enormously accelerate corrosion and is what happens to, for example, chrome plated parts on cars. They get badly pitted quite quickly (not though in Arizona). Modern cars do not use chrome I don't think. Of the metal pair, the less "active" one is preserved and the more active one suffers. In order of activity Chrome is lower than Iron. Copper is likely a nice material for such sleeves since it is ductile and can 'flow' (I guess) into the wire without too much pressure or too much damage to the original wire. (You wouldn't want a sleeve that cut through the wire). However, Copper has a lower activity than Iron and so Zinc plated sleeves are use. In this case the Zinc has an even higher activity than Iron or Copper and so it is 'sacrificed' and the integrity of the cable is preserved. For some reason, (I have no idea at all) the zinc must cause some problem with the stainless steel (Iron, Nickel, Chrome and maybe other bits alloy) http://www.qsl.net/n9zia/electrochemical.html http://www.lytron.com/support/galvanic_corrosion.htm Google for [tin copper aluminium electrochemical potential] |
#4
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