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Joseph Gwinn
 
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In article ,
Ned Simmons wrote:

In article JoeGwinn-C1340A.12261514052005
@comcast.dca.giganews.com, says...
In article .com,
" wrote:

[snip]

I would think that soft soldering would work perfectly, and is easily a
factor of ten stronger than any epoxy or loctite compound, so a soldered
connection will last forever in such service.


A factor of 2 would be closer.


Solder metal is far stronger than epoxy or loctite, especially
silver-bearing solder. Even crappy metal is ~20,000 psi, versus ~2,000
psi for plastics. Solder does creep, but so do plastics, although epoxy
isn't bad. Solder, being soft, is less brittle.

The really strong epoxies, such as those used for repair of aluminium
airplanes, needs lots of process and care, and high-temperature cure,
and are not all that easily available. Even so, the metal is stronger.


I suspect the reason that
Loctite didn't work was that there was no clearance between
the parts. Solder's not going to work any better under
those circumstances.


This is a good point. Both require a few thousandths of an inch of
clearance to work well, although solder bridges gaps better.

But anyway, soft solder ought to work well.

Joe Gwinn