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What is the purspose of pre-tinned wire?
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Mr. Haney
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What is the purspose of pre-tinned wire?
On Fri, 17 Apr 2009 18:59:48 GMT,
(GregS)
wrote:
In article ,
(GregS) wrote:
In article ,
(Dave Platt)
wrote:
In article ,
Pilgrim wrote:
Tin has a much lower conductivity than copper, and as RF travels on
the surface of a conductor, it would attenuate RF and high frequency AC
Is that why most, but not all, teflon insulated wire was silver plated?
My understanding is that the Teflon-insulated wire uses silverplating
for a couple of reasons, related to the high melting point of Teflon
(and thus the high temperatures to which the wire is exposed when the
Teflon is melt-extruded onto the conductors).
I checked looked at a spool of about #20 stranded wire. It does look very shiny
like silver.
I thought it was odd looking at it. its made up of a tightly twisted center
section and a loosly woven outer section around the inner section. The TFE is
almost a fluorescent blue. Neat stuff. 19/32 strands.
This got to be audio grade !
It is likely SPC and is Mil grade. There is no such thing as "audio
grade". You have been talking to too many consumer electronics
salespersons.
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