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DoN. Nichols DoN. Nichols is offline
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Default the accidental plater

On 2008-11-11, Don Young wrote:

wrote in message
...
Here is what goes on.... I bend a thin wall brass tube to shape then I
have
to melt the bending medium out of the pipe with a torch. This causes a
black scaling to show up on the outside of the pipe. To remove this I dip
the pipe in a 50/50 mix of muratic acid and water. This in turn plates the
pipe with very thin copper that I have to buff off.


Would a paint stripping gun get hot enough to remove your bending
medium without producing scale?
--Glenn Lyford
I bet it would. My heat gun works great for mass de-soldering of old circuit
boards. I can just melt the solder, whack the board against something solid,
and all the components fall off.


I'm surprised that I haven't seen mention of Cerrobend here. It
is a low melting point alloy designed for the purpose. IIRC, it melts
below the boiling point of water, so you can extract it without getting
hot enough to generate scale. The one disadvantage to Cerrobend (and
several other Cerro alloys) is that they are quite expensive, so if you
need a large amount for your support, it will not be cheap. (However,
it is infinitely reusable -- just make sure that you melt it in a
non-metalic container -- porcelain, quartz, anything which will handle
boiling water and not be likely to form an alloy with your bending
support.

As for the solder melting -- that may be well below the melting
point of the alloy which you are using for bend support. *Good* solder
is (or was) something like 38/62 (I forget which side was tin) but that
was the percentage for the eutectic alloy -- the one with the lowest
melting point.

Enjoy,
DoN.

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