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My homebrew open wire line has spacers held on by soldered tie wires
every foot. So, in the 90 foot rise, a lot of tie wires. I used copper wire and 60/40 solder. While the copper wire has certainly acquired a greenish patina over the years, if I inspect the soldered connections they have flaky white- gray stuff on the outside. It seems to be pretty soft and if I scratch at it I can see shiny solder underneath. The green on the copper is copper carbonate, I suppose. The whitish stuff on the solder joints is maybe lead carbonate, lead acetate, lead sulfide, maybe tin something? Is the chemical reaction progressive, or does the coating on the outside stop further reactions from going on in the joint? Any lessons I should learn about protecting outdoors soldered joints? The environment is pretty benign, just hot summers, cold winters, occasional ice storms, no sal****er air. Tim N3QE |
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