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Old April 18th 04, 03:45 AM
JLB
 
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What about silver plated RF connectors?

As far as that goes, there are also plenty of gold plated connectors out
there.

Jim
N8EE

"Richard Clark" wrote in message
news
On Fri, 16 Apr 2004 20:40:53 -0400, "JLB"
wrote:


"S" wrote in message
. net...
silver is a better conductor than gold, but will tarnish very easily,

might
now be a good idea for what you are intending

I thought that silver oxide was a decent conductor, which is why it is
sometimes used as a plateing material.


Hi All,

It hardly matters unless you are speaking of switch contacts.
Insulated wire's insulation is absolutely unconductive, and yet in the
context of antennas it doesn't impact the wire's capacity to carry
current.

Oxidation products only become a problem at interfaces where they
either resist current between the joined conductors, or create a
semiconducting barrier.

The technician is taught to clean surfaces of tarnish to bring bright
metal into contact. Then crimp them (or twist the wire - same thing)
for a gas tight seal. Then solder them to weather proof the seal
(solder is never meant to be a mechanical join or the conductive
path). Common practice allows for solder to provide more
functionality than what I describe - this does not elevate the method.
Barring the final solder, switch contact faces must meet the same
conditions of bright metal and gas tight seals. This is often
achieved by pressure (some mistake the so-called "wiping" action as
meaning to scrub the oxide away - a useful metaphor but only that;
otherwise switches would self demolish in very few operations) and a
sustaining current (wet vs. dry contacts).

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC