Sujet : Re: soldering enamelled wire, problems.
De : llc (at) *nospam* fonz.dk (Lasse Langwadt)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 01. Jul 2025, 16:41:23
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <1040vj3$2trh8$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 6/27/25 20:29,
albert@spenarnc.xs4all.nl wrote:
In article <MPG.42c77e58c64c37a898a047@news.eternal-september.org>,
Ralph Mowery <rmowery42@charter.net> wrote:
In article <nnd$3c2ee3c9$5821dd46@9a3444084143502b>,
albert@spenarnc.xs4all.nl says...
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I find it unlikely with house hold items to find aluminum wires.
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The wire I use is .25 mm. In a natural gas flame this melts
readily. This must be copper or I would have not the slightest
chance to solder it.
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I have noticed that many wires comming from China or bought on ebay is
copper coated aluminum (if not some other thing that is not mentioned)
Aluminium is cheaper than copper, but i doubt that copper coating
.25 mm wire is cost effective.
you can doubt but ...
The Chinese are so advanced that they draw aluminium wire in vacuum -
to avoid oxidation - and then run them -ma shang- through molten
copper, to spare a few bucks on material?
that is not how it is made, google CCA wire