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Dan Schaefer wrote:
> The reason you don't want to use a steel firewall pass-thru conductor
> hasn't got a thing to do with steel's tendency to magnetize but rather
> because it's a lousy conductor. When you're trying to get enough
It's not _that_ lousy of a conductor, and any losses are made up for
easily enough by just going for a bigger bolt. Of course, that weighs
more...
A 1-gauge wire has a diameter of .289", and is good for a little over
100 amps continuously. A 1/2" copper bolt ought to be good for about
300 amps continuous duty (having about 3x the cross-sectional area of a
1-gauge wire). How much current needs to flow here? I'd think the
alternator output plus a comfortable cushion.
> Oh yeah, if you can get it done without it being ridiculously
> expensive, have your threaded copper gizmos silver-plated. In my other
Very bad idea, I think. Silver has a very low resistance (though just
the plating won't help much at DC or low AC frequencies), but the oxide
has very high resistance. That's why electronic parts are often
gold-plated; gold doesn't corrode. In this application, though, it
seems like any plating would be overkill.
--
Dan Brown, KE6MKS, danb@accex.net
Meddle not in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and taste good
with ketchup.
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