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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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For high temp applications. The type I have has 2 parts to the PTFE
insulation. The outer strips off easily with any old wire stripper, but however new , gap limited cutters , will not cut the underlying PTFE. Outer is double spiral wound PTFE sheet/ribbon I think, heated to lock together to a certain extent. The inner is more fibrous in nature. Cutting the remaining inner material , even difficult with a razor. The only technique I've found, is remove the outer as normal , then .5mm grinding disc in a Dremmel , only just touching, run all around and then pull off, rarely cuts a wire strand . Other than some mega-buck NASA/Mil approved cutter any other ideas? |
#2
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In article ,
"N_Cook" wrote: For high temp applications. The type I have has 2 parts to the PTFE insulation. The outer strips off easily with any old wire stripper, but however new , gap limited cutters , will not cut the underlying PTFE. Outer is double spiral wound PTFE sheet/ribbon I think, heated to lock together to a certain extent. The inner is more fibrous in nature. Cutting the remaining inner material , even difficult with a razor. The only technique I've found, is remove the outer as normal , then .5mm grinding disc in a Dremmel , only just touching, run all around and then pull off, rarely cuts a wire strand . Other than some mega-buck NASA/Mil approved cutter any other ideas? The type of stripper shown he http://rocky.digikey.com/weblib/OK%2...hoto/ST-500.jp g is pretty good with teflon. Sold under various brand names, and also in different adjustable gauge ranges or in fixed sizes. For teflon, squeeze fully to cut through insulation, then back off very slightly to pull off slug. |
#3
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In article ,
N_Cook wrote: For high temp applications. The type I have has 2 parts to the PTFE insulation. The outer strips off easily with any old wire stripper, but however new , gap limited cutters , will not cut the underlying PTFE. Outer is double spiral wound PTFE sheet/ribbon I think, heated to lock together to a certain extent. The inner is more fibrous in nature. Cutting the remaining inner material , even difficult with a razor. The only technique I've found, is remove the outer as normal , then .5mm grinding disc in a Dremmel , only just touching, run all around and then pull off, rarely cuts a wire strand . Other than some mega-buck NASA/Mil approved cutter any other ideas? I've had reasonably good luck on PFTE wire and cable (including the spiral-fused-tape-insulated type) using a set of "hot tweezer" wire strippers. Bought 'em used through a dealer in such things who has a table at a local hamfest every month. The temperature of the heated stripping element can be adjusted... anywhere from a gentle warmth which melts through PVC without making it smoke, up to a literally red-hot glow which will cut through PFTE down to the underlying wire. [Using a fume evacuator, or at least a small fan, is a good idea in this case, to avoid the risk of inhaling the fumes... a nasty respiratory syndrome can result. Don't do this at all if you keep pet birds around... they're acutely sensitive to the fumes from overheated Teflon and etc.] -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#4
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On 2/24/2011 12:48 PM, Dave Platt wrote:
[Using a fume evacuator, or at least a small fan, is a good idea in this case, to avoid the risk of inhaling the fumes... a nasty respiratory syndrome can result. Don't do this at all if you keep pet birds around... they're acutely sensitive to the fumes from overheated Teflon and etc.] And nerve damage... Both nasty side effects. Good ventilation is a must. Jeff |
#5
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Smitty Two wrote in message
news ![]() In article , "N_Cook" wrote: For high temp applications. The type I have has 2 parts to the PTFE insulation. The outer strips off easily with any old wire stripper, but however new , gap limited cutters , will not cut the underlying PTFE. Outer is double spiral wound PTFE sheet/ribbon I think, heated to lock together to a certain extent. The inner is more fibrous in nature. Cutting the remaining inner material , even difficult with a razor. The only technique I've found, is remove the outer as normal , then .5mm grinding disc in a Dremmel , only just touching, run all around and then pull off, rarely cuts a wire strand . Other than some mega-buck NASA/Mil approved cutter any other ideas? The type of stripper shown he http://rocky.digikey.com/weblib/OK%2...hoto/ST-500.jp g is pretty good with teflon. Sold under various brand names, and also in different adjustable gauge ranges or in fixed sizes. For teflon, squeeze fully to cut through insulation, then back off very slightly to pull off slug. Thats the type I use. I think I'll make my own cutter, a pair of razor blades set with a tapered gap between cutting edges (gap a bit larger than ext diam down to wire diam). Push the wire down the gap in 2 orthogonal directions and then rotate round at the narrow end. Then sleeve should slide off easily as its the cutting completely around that is the problem. I'd rather avoid melting of PTFE (the fluoro bit) especially as it cuts so easily. Hopefully something like a minimal version of these PTFE specific cutters, I only have one drum of one size of this wire, so no adjuster needed http://int.rsdelivers.com/product/rs...091-45mmdia-cu tting/0608301.aspx http://docs-europe.electrocomponents...6b8001b254.pdf |
#6
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Works a treat, cutting this pesky thin inner layer of PTFE and not the wire
filaments. Two 2inch lengths of 12mm diameter hotmelt sticks. Temp controlled solder iron , melt a slot axially in one. With a pair of razor blades gripped in an engineer's cramp with gap one end , wider than the outer PTFE, and the other with blade edges touching at a point. Push the wide gap end into the hotmelt. Cool and repeat with the other end. Mark along the razor edge where the stripped wire falls to. Push some of the sleeved wire down to just beyond this point and drop hotmelt , filling the space down to the closed gap end. One sliding cut and 180 degree rotation is all that is needed , slide away, remove from the slot and pull off the cut sleeving. |
#7
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In article ,
"N_Cook" wrote: Smitty Two wrote in message news ![]() In article , "N_Cook" wrote: For high temp applications. The type I have has 2 parts to the PTFE insulation. The outer strips off easily with any old wire stripper, but however new , gap limited cutters , will not cut the underlying PTFE. Outer is double spiral wound PTFE sheet/ribbon I think, heated to lock together to a certain extent. The inner is more fibrous in nature. Cutting the remaining inner material , even difficult with a razor. The only technique I've found, is remove the outer as normal , then .5mm grinding disc in a Dremmel , only just touching, run all around and then pull off, rarely cuts a wire strand . Other than some mega-buck NASA/Mil approved cutter any other ideas? The type of stripper shown he http://rocky.digikey.com/weblib/OK%2...hoto/ST-500.jp g is pretty good with teflon. Sold under various brand names, and also in different adjustable gauge ranges or in fixed sizes. For teflon, squeeze fully to cut through insulation, then back off very slightly to pull off slug. Thats the type I use. I think I'll make my own cutter, a pair of razor blades set with a tapered gap between cutting edges (gap a bit larger than ext diam down to wire diam). Push the wire down the gap in 2 orthogonal directions and then rotate round at the narrow end. Then sleeve should slide off easily as its the cutting completely around that is the problem. I'd rather avoid melting of PTFE (the fluoro bit) especially as it cuts so easily. Hopefully something like a minimal version of these PTFE specific cutters, I only have one drum of one size of this wire, so no adjuster needed http://int.rsdelivers.com/product/rs...091-45mmdia-cu tting/0608301.aspx http://docs-europe.electrocomponents...6b8001b254.pdf Glad your home-made gadget worked, but the cutters I referenced are the ones we use every day for stripping teflon. I'm surprised they wouldn't do it for you. It does take a bit of technique as noted, setting depth to cut fully through, then backing off pressure to remove slug. The 90 degree rotate and 2nd cut helps, but for production work is too slow. |
#8
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Smitty Two wrote in message
news ![]() In article , "N_Cook" wrote: Smitty Two wrote in message news ![]() In article , "N_Cook" wrote: For high temp applications. The type I have has 2 parts to the PTFE insulation. The outer strips off easily with any old wire stripper, but however new , gap limited cutters , will not cut the underlying PTFE. Outer is double spiral wound PTFE sheet/ribbon I think, heated to lock together to a certain extent. The inner is more fibrous in nature. Cutting the remaining inner material , even difficult with a razor. The only technique I've found, is remove the outer as normal , then .5mm grinding disc in a Dremmel , only just touching, run all around and then pull off, rarely cuts a wire strand . Other than some mega-buck NASA/Mil approved cutter any other ideas? The type of stripper shown he http://rocky.digikey.com/weblib/OK%2...hoto/ST-500.jp g is pretty good with teflon. Sold under various brand names, and also in different adjustable gauge ranges or in fixed sizes. For teflon, squeeze fully to cut through insulation, then back off very slightly to pull off slug. Thats the type I use. I think I'll make my own cutter, a pair of razor blades set with a tapered gap between cutting edges (gap a bit larger than ext diam down to wire diam). Push the wire down the gap in 2 orthogonal directions and then rotate round at the narrow end. Then sleeve should slide off easily as its the cutting completely around that is the problem. I'd rather avoid melting of PTFE (the fluoro bit) especially as it cuts so easily. Hopefully something like a minimal version of these PTFE specific cutters, I only have one drum of one size of this wire, so no adjuster needed http://int.rsdelivers.com/product/rs...091-45mmdia-cu tting/0608301.aspx http://docs-europe.electrocomponents...6b8001b254.pdf Glad your home-made gadget worked, but the cutters I referenced are the ones we use every day for stripping teflon. I'm surprised they wouldn't do it for you. It does take a bit of technique as noted, setting depth to cut fully through, then backing off pressure to remove slug. The 90 degree rotate and 2nd cut helps, but for production work is too slow. This wire is very fine filament multistrand. perhaps 30 wire strands. If it was solid conductor it would be easier to strip. But the main problem is the multiple thin sleeve layers , perhaps 3, under the thick outer sleeving. PTFE seems to be strong in one sense and transverse very weak. If the fibrey part was laid up transversely it would easily part at the cutting point, but the layup is strong axially. |
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