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On Tue, 28 Apr 2009 12:43:59 -0700 (PDT), lagagnon
wrote: I am about to refurbish an old Hy-Gain TH3-Mk3 Thunderbird tri-band yagi. This yagi has been used in a coastal environment and thus the aluminum is slightly pitted and most of the connecting hardware needs replacing. I figure steel wool would work fine for the aluminum tubing, I know how to test the traps, but I am wondering whether to use stainless steel or galvanized hardware? Which would react least over time with the aluminum? Also, I remember many years ago there is an electrical joint compound stuff for using between the tubing sleeves - can anyone please give me some brand names of this stuff? Any other ideas appreciated.... Larry VE7EA I just called Bencher/Butternut about my aluminun vertical and they suggested NOT using steel wool for cleaning because the residue of the steel wool rusts very easily. I know this is true from my boat where we generally use bronze wool to avoid rust. The steel wool sheds (and I know this from hard experience) as a bear to clean out of stuff, such as the deck of my boat. The Butternut guy suggest that rather than steel wool use either emery paper or a Scotchbright pad as they do not leave residue. Butternut also has a conductive grease that they provide with their antennas to keep the metal to metal joints conductive. Steel wool residue can also cause bimetalic corrosion with aluminum. Most assuredly use stainless steel fitting and screws. Ordinary screws/nuts will rust very rabidly. Any boat owner knows that many so-called compression clamps, allegedly in stainless, do not have stainless bolts to tighten them. Most of us take a magnet to the boating store to ensure we got the right things. BTW a boating store is generally a pretty good place to get stainless steel hardware. They know that a boat owner will scream bloody murder and besmirch their reputation if they sell anything but the top quality stuff. We ran one boating store out of town for selling shoddy stuff. I'm embarking on exactly the same rebuild on my Butternut vertical so I just talked to the factory specialist on this very subject just last week. My spare parts just arrived yesterday. I'm rebuilding because after 25 years, the wind flexed the tube that mount the antenna, a vertical, into the ground. I guess that is not too bad service for this antenna. Jon Teske, W3JT Maryland |
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