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#1
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I know that microwaves are sometimes used to cure epoxy but does
cured epoxy absorb microwaves? More practically put: can I use epoxy to glue some parts of a double quad for 2.4GHz? Kind regards, Eike -- "The adventurs may be mad, but the adventurer must be sane." - G. K. Chesterton (1908) |
#2
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Eike Lantzsch, ZP6CGE wrote:
I know that microwaves are sometimes used to cure epoxy but does cured epoxy absorb microwaves? More practically put: can I use epoxy to glue some parts of a double quad for 2.4GHz? Your best source of information here will be the manufacturer. Next best will be to put a test object (made of things that don't absorb microwaves) glued with the epoxy in your microwave with a cup of water and heat it until the water boils. If the test object isn't uncomfortably hot, the epoxy probably is OK for use in your quad. Microwave ovens here in the US seem to run around 2.45 GHz, which is fairly close to your working frequency, so the test will be a fairly good indication. -- Mike Andrews, W5EGO Tired old sysadmin |
#3
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"Eike Lantzsch, ZP6CGE" ) writes:
I know that microwaves are sometimes used to cure epoxy but does cured epoxy absorb microwaves? More practically put: can I use epoxy to glue some parts of a double quad for 2.4GHz? Not sure if it is relevant to modern materials, but when I worked for the National Research Council (Canada) many years ago, I used to make dummy loads by mixing a powdered ferrite material with the then-available epoxy cement and pouring a tapered slab of this mix into the waveguide. (These were used as the flat load at liquid nitrogen temperatures in a Dicke radiometer at S and X bands.) .... Martin VE3OAT |
#4
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.....yes, you can, provided you use Araldite slow setting epoxy (the
blue kind). don't forget that the FR4 board is made of it! while working at Tadiran, years ago, we found out that the slower the epoxy cure the better its RF characteristics. we never found out why- actually we never tried hard enough- but the fact remains. on higher frequencies you have to be careful, but Bluetooth thrives on FR4 (at 2.4GHz)!. Saandy 4Z5KS |
#5
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.....yes, you can, provided you use Araldite slow setting epoxy (the
blue kind). don't forget that the FR4 board is made of it! while working at Tadiran, years ago, we found out that the slower the epoxy cure the better its RF characteristics. we never found out why- actually we never tried hard enough- but the fact remains. on higher frequencies you have to be careful, but Bluetooth thrives on FR4 (at 2.4GHz)!. Saandy 4Z5KS |
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