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Just an FYI, solid wire in a certain gauge has lower resistance than stranded in the same gauge. 22awg solid does NOT = 22awg stranded. i would suggest going with solid due to the lower resistance. I am a signal construction foreman for BNSF and by rule, we figure stranded at roughly double the resistance for our cable runs. I would at least make your bus wires solid and have larger gauge stranded for the feeders.
BuZZZZZ.. Talk about a hijacked thread (solid or stranded) Thanks to all who contributed an on topic response to my original question. As usual, you guys and gals are very helpful even if some of do roam off topic !eja
Stranded for everything -I've seen too many solid feeders broken. I built a 4x8 for a gentleman that gave me a bunch of solid core phone line to use for feeders. Never again. I spent more time repairing connections that broke just in the effort of routing wires. Scotchlock suitcase connectors - NEVER!!! Always solder or use a screw terminal for a connection.Quite a few years in the car audio industry taught me to hate these vile connectors. Our shop used to make a lot of money repairing the work of other shops (Circuit City and Best Buy at the time) that used scotchlocks. They are unreliable and the connection will eventually corrode. Alarm installs using scotchlocks were the worst. Tracking down random false alarms due to intermittent scotchlock connections is very time consuming.
That clear stuff is most likely dielectric grease. It's meant to be displaced when the mechanical connection is made and keep out air so corrosion is inhibited.
Exactly. But what really is dielectric grease? Vaseline (petroleum jelly)?Phone company has been using solid copper wire and non-soldered connections for well over 100 years. I also don't know how they managed to keep things working for over a century!
But what really is dielectric grease? Vaseline (petroleum jelly)?
I have also read (from many sources) that crimped connections are more reliable than soldered connections. To me it is counter intuitive, but I have noting to disprove those claims. But I winder if those studies were done by ... the crimp connector manufacturers! However I don't know if any of you realize that every computer out there, and most consumer electronic devices have many (or all of its internal wiring attached to the connectors) using IDCs (insulation displacement type of connectors). They work like the suitcase connectors - puncture through the wire insulation and pinch the stranded conductor. For example, all the ribbon cables in your computer have IDC connectors on them. How often have you seen them fail (especially considering that each connector has 100 or more connections in them)?To me a well made solder joint seems to be much more reliable than any mechanical connection relying on pressure between 2 parts. However I also thin that properly made (that is the important part) crimp connections or properly tightened screw terminals are more than adequate for model railroad wiring. The screw terminals have been extensively used in all sorts of electrical equipment for a very long time, and they are still being used (especially in power supplies). If they were not reliable, they would have been abandoned.Unless exposed to a constant high-frequency vibration, screw terminals are quite reliable. If properly tightened, under the layout, they will never experience the type of prolonged vibrations which could loosen them.Corrosion can be a factor. But that is true with solder joints too. The industry has a solution for that too. Phone line splices are often filled with a clear grease(vaseline?) to protect the exposed metal from corrosion. Special grease is also used for crimp joints on aluminum wiring. If someone is really worried about corrosion in their crimps, the could apply some vaseline to the wire before crimping it in the terminal.
My source of wire and some of the connectors I use... http://wsdeans.com/products/wire/index.htmlI am using some of their 4 pin gold plated connectors as interconnects between the yard moduled on our Ntrak layout. I still can't believe Cinch-Jones (sp?) connectors were the standard for so long.