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#1
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Solder to Aluminum?
Hi, Antenna Guys.
My FM antenna had the wire attachment posts ripped out by the wind. I'm wondering if I can solder to the aluminum? Then I'd epoxy over it. I'd just try it, but I'm afraid it might pop in my face or something. -- Ed Light Smiley :-/ MS Smiley :-\ Send spam to the FTC at Thanks, robots. Bring the Troops Home: http://bringthemhomenow.org |
#2
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Solder to Aluminum?
"Ed Light" wrote in message news:hE6Gg.17746$RD.221@fed1read08... Hi, Antenna Guys. My FM antenna had the wire attachment posts ripped out by the wind. I'm wondering if I can solder to the aluminum? Then I'd epoxy over it. I'd just try it, but I'm afraid it might pop in my face or something. -- Ed Light Smiley :-/ MS Smiley :-\ Send spam to the FTC at Thanks, robots. Bring the Troops Home: http://bringthemhomenow.org Why not just replace the posts with 4-40 or 6-32 stainless steel bolts and nuts. Drill new holes in the aluminum if needed. Tam/WB2TT |
#3
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Solder to Aluminum?
Ed Light wrote:
Hi, Antenna Guys. My FM antenna had the wire attachment posts ripped out by the wind. I'm wondering if I can solder to the aluminum? Then I'd epoxy over it. I'd just try it, but I'm afraid it might pop in my face or something. Ordinary solder, no, but there are solders specifically made for aluminum. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#4
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Solder to Aluminum?
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#5
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Solder to Aluminum?
On Sun, 20 Aug 2006 20:15:48 -0400, Tam/WB2TT wrote:
"Ed Light" wrote: My FM antenna had the wire attachment posts ripped out by the wind. I'm wondering if I can solder to the aluminum? Then I'd epoxy over it. I'd just try it, but I'm afraid it might pop in my face or something. Why not just replace the posts with 4-40 or 6-32 stainless steel bolts and nuts. Drill new holes in the aluminum if needed. Or, use a pop-rivet tool to attach whatever fastner(s) suit you. Or, use small, SS, worm-screw pipe clamps to attach the wire(s) directly. HTH Jonesy -- Marvin L Jones | jonz | W3DHJ | linux 38.24N 104.55W | @ config.com | Jonesy | OS/2 *** Killfiling google posts: http//jonz.net/ng.htm |
#6
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Solder to Aluminum?
Thanks, folks.
-- Ed Light Smiley :-/ MS Smiley :-\ Send spam to the FTC at Thanks, robots. Bring the Troops Home: http://bringthemhomenow.org |
#7
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Solder to Aluminum?
My FM antenna had the wire attachment posts ripped out by the wind.
I'm wondering if I can solder to the aluminum? Then I'd epoxy over it. I'd just try it, but I'm afraid it might pop in my face or something. Ordinary solder, no, but there are solders specifically made for aluminum. I suspect safety guru's would say one should always wear (safety) glasses when soldering! It takes practice, but if you'll "puddle" some silver polish on a spot you want to solder, rub it a bit to clean the oxide off the aluminum, and then solder right through the puddle with a hot iron (the stuff will bubble and sizzle, so do wear glasses!), one CAN solder to aluminum with standard solder and without buying some expensive stuff for a onesies/twosies job. I don't remember how strong the solder joint was nor did I test how long such a joint might last, but it DID solder and stick! --Myron A. Calhoun. -- Five boxes preserve our freedoms: soap, ballot, witness, jury, and cartridge PhD (retired) W0PBV Barbershop Tenor CDL(PTXS) (785) 539-4448 NRA Life Member and Rifle, Pistol, & Home Firearm Safety Certified Instructor Certified Instructor for the Kansas Concealed-Carry Handgun license |
#8
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Don't Solder to Aluminum
Greetings,
A soldered joint to aluminium won't last. For a good electrical connection to aluminium get some jointing compound suitable for ensuring an electrical contact between dissimilar metals without corrosion. One has to use the same stuff for aluminium to aluminium connections as well or the aluminium will oxidise at the joint. Required for long (HF) yagi elements. Put the jointing compound on the cleaned aluminium and on the wire then fasten them together; by clamp, screw whatever. Some would tape up the joint so the jointing compound doesn't blow or wash away. There's an article in Radcom July 2005, p75 Technical topics, on working with aluminium. I've assisted engineers/technicians constructing/repairing HF yagi's on which every single aluminium to anything connection that has to conduct has the compound put on. Note that copper corrodes aluminium and that tightly clamping aluminum is useless at stopping oxidation in the joint. Take the joint apart later and everything will be wet ... Good luck. , ZL2TTS |
#9
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Solder to Aluminum?
wrote in message ... Ed Light wrote: Hi, Antenna Guys. My FM antenna had the wire attachment posts ripped out by the wind. I'm wondering if I can solder to the aluminum? Then I'd epoxy over it. I'd just try it, but I'm afraid it might pop in my face or something. Ordinary solder, no, but there are solders specifically made for aluminum. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. Actually regualr old 40/60 solid core works fine . the trick is the flux. Use 10w motor oil. Over the years Ive won more than a few after work beers from guys around here by soldering a copper wire to a pop top ring. |
#10
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Solder to Aluminum?
On Sun, 1 Oct 2006 22:33:59 -0400, "Jimmie D"
wrote: Actually regualr old 40/60 solid core works fine . the trick is the flux. Use 10w motor oil. Over the years Ive won more than a few after work beers from guys around here by soldering a copper wire to a pop top ring. How strong does it hold, can it be pulled off easily? w. |
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