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Like DKS, I find claims of conductive lubricants greatly untrue. But we all do agree that coating bare metal with an oily substance will ******** oxidation. As I mentioned, there are many such substances out there (likely including olive oil), so use whatever works for you.I still suspect that oily rail-head will decrease the model locomotive's adhesion and reduce its pulling ability. But depending on the layout's design and train lengths, that might not matter. Then there is the matter of "crud" sticking to the wheel treads when they are running on a track coated with a oxidation barrier (oily substance). It is one of those subjects which has lots of pros and cons.However, there are true conductive lubricants out there. Like carbon-based https://www.nyelubricants.com/electrically-conductive Or silver-based http://www.cool-amp.com/There are others too.
I’m just wondering that the claims by makers that these various products are “conductive” is being confused with “non-insulating”, perhaps.Anyhow I am keeping an open mind and I will let everyone know towards the end of the year on how my NoOxId experiment works out.
. . . and next year repeat the test using let's say transmission fluid, then after that, a Wahl Clipper oil. I still say that all of those oily substances will protect the surface of the metal from oxidation but might have undesired side effects.Like narrowminded found, there are other similar threads on what to do to keep the track clean and the electrical pickup reliable. If you do a Google each you will find plenty of different methods, every one of them working well for someone. This subject is like politics and religion - lots of heated opinions about it.I'm not trying to be a wise guy, but I've hears some many "ideal track cleaning and preserving conductivity" stories that I'm jaded by now. But if it works for you . . .
A buddy of mine and I have tested at least a half-dozen of these so-called "conductive" products over the last few decades. None of them--zero, zip, nada--were the slightest bit conductive. They may ******** the formation of substances that inhibit conductivity, but they are not themselves inherently conductive. We therefore place any such claims in the category of snake oil.
Hmm, I wonder whether snake oil is conductive.. Otto K.
I wonder if there is a chemical treatment for "nickel-silver" (actually nickel and copper) that will "passivate" the surface, rather than just block air from the surface so that it does not oxidize. There are various metal polishes that claim to passivate various metals (for instance, stainless steel), and I have often used a sodium bicarbonate solution to help keep cartridge brass from tarnishing. These do seem to work to varying degrees, without making the metallic surfaces oily.
No, but electric-eel oil is conductive.
The model RR folklore seems to indicate that the naturally occurring nickel-silver oxide is already electrically conductive (but we don't know how accurate that is and how conductive it is).
And my experience about black marks on a wiping rag remarked in this other post may be based in this. The nickel silver rail was determined to be a marked improvement over the old plain brass rail decades ago so maybe there's some truth to it. The only thing I know is that black (oxide?) appearing on my wiping rag doesn't seem to hurt on my layout. I used to think it did/ must but my recent experience as outlined in the old thread that touches on this topic has caused me to question that. Last night I added my overdue update to that old thread. https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=41162.0 I hope linking as I've done is not found objectionable. It just saves gobs of retyping and is intended to add to the current discussion with some real experiences not to distract nor promote as a final solution to anything. As we've all acknowledged, myself included, the many and varied conditions can have an effect on all of this. There may be an answer that applies to all conditions but I can't claim that with any certainty nor have I found anything that can. It may well be that there is more than one thing going on with one effort handling one thing and another handling another.