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Pete,Excellent points you made. Have you used Flitz before, I never heard of Top Bright.DziękujęY-it
Does it act as a conductor or an insulator? I keep looking to buy that 'Conducta-lube' but it's seemingly never available. Does that mean it works?
Pete, does one really want oil in the cup bearings? Does it act as a conductor or an insulator? I keep looking to buy that 'Conducta-lube' but it's seemingly never available. Does that mean it works?
Do you run your car or bicycle with dry (unlubricated) wheel bearings?Those contact points absolutely need to be lubricated. A true conductive lubricant would be beneficial, but regular lubricants will work (that is what the factory uses, and the models run). I have not studied how those metal surfaces (bearing cup and axle point) interact on the microscopic level, since the models run, there is a metal-to-metal connection, even with the lubricant present. Conducta-lube? If you are talking about the lubricant sold by Atlas, is not really conductive. IIRC, the label states that it improves conductivity. Probably because the oil film protects the metal surfaces from oxidizing. We would need a mechanical engineer to give us some lessons on how this all works (because it all does seem to work).
We use Deoxit all the time for our open frame micro servos for micro R/C airplanes. Since they are open frame servos, they pick up all kinds of dirt and when you are dealing with control surface movements for a tiny R/C airplane, precision counts. The stuff is a cure all for everything electrical and we have been using it long enough that we don't even question it.Just a cautionary note. The "red" Deoxit is the more popular one and used for metal to metal contacts. I've used it on plastic and it's "ok" but I'm not 100% it's "Safe on Plastic".https://caig.com/deoxit-d-series/They make another version called Fader Lube and that is specifically safe for plastic. I've used both and noticed not differance in either's efficacy in resolving the problems.https://caig.com/fader-f-series/
My car and bicycle bearings don't perform an electrical pickup function. And the 'bearing cups' on an N scale loco don't perform a weight bearing function. (We probably shouldn't call them that.) Not to mention the size difference. I think that's a totally inappropriate comparison. I have never seen 'bearing cups' lubed from the factory, or lubed them myself, or thought it necessary. I have seen dirt build up in the cups, necessitating a clean out, and I can't imagine that having a oil there to catch dirt is a good thing.