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Bob La Londe[_7_] October 2nd 17 08:25 PM

Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire
 
Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire as a core for a mold I am
designing.

I checked McMaster and they topped out at 0.082 in. I'm looking for .118in
(3mm). Some of the lab and medical supplies go to .090 in, but that's still
too small. Suggestions?


Bob La Londe[_7_] October 2nd 17 08:42 PM

Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire
 
"Bob La Londe" wrote in message ...

Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire as a core for a mold I am
designing.

I checked McMaster and they topped out at 0.082 in. I'm looking for .118in
(3mm). Some of the lab and medical supplies go to .090 in, but that's still
too small. Suggestions?

*************
So far the best appearing solution is to get 3mm OD (2mm ID) tube and push
some 2mm wire thru it. If its tight, great. I can make a jig to hold the
tube straight during the process.



Carl Ijames[_13_] October 2nd 17 09:05 PM

Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire
 
"Bob La Londe" wrote in message ...

"Bob La Londe" wrote in message ...

Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire as a core for a mold I am
designing.

I checked McMaster and they topped out at 0.082 in. I'm looking for .118in
(3mm). Some of the lab and medical supplies go to .090 in, but that's still
too small. Suggestions?

*************
So far the best appearing solution is to get 3mm OD (2mm ID) tube and push
some 2mm wire thru it. If its tight, great. I can make a jig to hold the
tube straight during the process.
================================================== =======

So you need the overall od to be 3 mm, not 3 mm rod plus a teflon coating?
You don't say how long or how many, but if you need a tight grip between
teflon and SS you could use teflon heat shrink on SS rod, instead of pushing
on teflon tubing. If the length is short, shrink in batches in an oven.

--
Regards,
Carl Ijames



Gunner Asch[_6_] October 2nd 17 09:09 PM

Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire
 
On Mon, 2 Oct 2017 16:05:46 -0400, "Carl Ijames"
wrote:

"Bob La Londe" wrote in message ...

"Bob La Londe" wrote in message ...

Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire as a core for a mold I am
designing.

I checked McMaster and they topped out at 0.082 in. I'm looking for .118in
(3mm). Some of the lab and medical supplies go to .090 in, but that's still
too small. Suggestions?

*************
So far the best appearing solution is to get 3mm OD (2mm ID) tube and push
some 2mm wire thru it. If its tight, great. I can make a jig to hold the
tube straight during the process.
================================================= ========

So you need the overall od to be 3 mm, not 3 mm rod plus a teflon coating?
You don't say how long or how many, but if you need a tight grip between
teflon and SS you could use teflon heat shrink on SS rod, instead of pushing
on teflon tubing. If the length is short, shrink in batches in an oven.



They make Teflon heatshrink? No ****?!!?

Thanks!!


---
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Bob La Londe[_7_] October 2nd 17 09:57 PM

Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire
 

"Carl Ijames" wrote in message ...

"Bob La Londe" wrote in message ...

"Bob La Londe" wrote in message ...

Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire as a core for a mold I am
designing.

I checked McMaster and they topped out at 0.082 in. I'm looking for .118in
(3mm). Some of the lab and medical supplies go to .090 in, but that's still
too small. Suggestions?

*************
So far the best appearing solution is to get 3mm OD (2mm ID) tube and push
some 2mm wire thru it. If its tight, great. I can make a jig to hold the
tube straight during the process.
================================================== =======

So you need the overall od to be 3 mm, not 3 mm rod plus a teflon coating?
You don't say how long or how many, but if you need a tight grip between
teflon and SS you could use teflon heat shrink on SS rod, instead of pushing
on teflon tubing. If the length is short, shrink in batches in an oven.
**************

Yes 3mm net OD. It could vary a couple thousandths. I had considered
bending the assembly outside of the critical area to keep them together.
Maybe even use a crimp sleeve past the bend as I know how slippery teflon
is. For this application a net length of around 3 inches and about 20
pieces, but if I can make it work I would likely repeat this process for
other applications. The teflon is used as it does not wick heat away as
quickly as steel, the wire is because it needs to be fairly straight. 3mm
is the spec.

I've done similar core pins with 1/4 teflon rod and a 6/32 machine screw
threaded inside. It works. The casting fills, and the screw provides both
rigidity to the pin, and a place to pull with pliers from the casting.
Sometimes I can get away with stainless wire for pins, but when the
clearance between the core pin and the wall of the cavity gets to small the
heat sink ability of the wire/core is significant. Also, the teflon pulls
from the casting much easier than a steel or stainless steel pin. You can
coat steel pins with motor oil (it can take the heat) as a release, but it
leaves a residue that can make succeeding processes more difficult or
require a cleaning process. Graphite and talcum powder also work, but each
has its limitations.





whit3rd October 3rd 17 12:14 AM

Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire
 
On Monday, October 2, 2017 at 12:25:57 PM UTC-7, Bob La Londe wrote:
Looking for 3mm Teflon Coated Stainless Wire... I'm looking for .118in
(3mm).


Probably your best bet is drawing a PTFE tube over a wire (and if you can draw the
wire thin on one end, that'd help). It is possible, also, to get thermocouple wire
in alloys like iron or chromel, with a variety of insulations (and mineral-insulated
or Teflon are not unheard-of). Whether you can actually FIND a supplier of
the raw wire with suitable insulation, will be a problem. In the old days, the Omega
catalog would have such things, but that's changed (or my Google-fu is weak).

If you anneal, and take a few wraps around a fixed capstan, you should be able to
gat a Vise-grip and comealong on the tip and
stretch your stainless wire significantly to make a narrow lead section.


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