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Registered Member #2431
Joined: Tue Oct 13 2009, 09:47PM
Location: Chico, CA. USA
Posts: 5639
i just bought a boat load of really nice vishay/caddock/TRW and no name brand HV resistors, but i want them under oil, the problem is how do i make the plastic body remain liqiud tight where the two leads exit?
i really dont know what else to do, i wonder if PVC can be glued with PMMA epoxy and made suffciciently liquid proof, i just dont want a pool of oil under my equipment each week.
i was leaning towards what i did with my oil ball bearing cap thread in which i threaded with a tap, a tight thread screw fitting, then reassembled them with excess PMMA. but i need other opinions.
Registered Member #2431
Joined: Tue Oct 13 2009, 09:47PM
Location: Chico, CA. USA
Posts: 5639
im thinking of making a tray of hard epoxy, filling it with Silicone tub and tile caulk, then pressing the resistors in to the wet silicone. if neccasary the silicone can be removed, and the resistors reused, this removes the hazard of springing a oil leak. since the silicone and epoxy are both solids.
i was advised by senior app engineer Richard Drawz, from Caddock not to hard encapsulate the resistors, as a difference in TCo would cause gaps between the resistor body and insulator, where corona will surely pop up. if expansion doesnt cause gaps, then shrinkage may cause cracking of the resistor Al2O body/core. so he advised only oil be used. He speculated that silicone would reduce heat dissipation over what is normally air, oil would increase effective wattage.
i wonder if silicone would conform to any dimensional changes while not being a liquid.
Registered Member #2901
Joined: Thu Jun 03 2010, 01:25PM
Location:
Posts: 837
Patrick wrote ... i wonder if PVC can be glued with PMMA epoxy and made suffciciently liquid proof
JB Weld (and other two component epoxy glues) is PVC and metal compatible (not sure about the insulation of HV wire though). Completely oil resistant once cured and vacuum tight. Why wouldn't that work?
Registered Member #1938
Joined: Sun Jan 25 2009, 12:44PM
Location: Romania
Posts: 701
Small PVC pipes and Hot glue ? Much cheaper than epoxy!
Like this:
It holds the seal very good!
Careful when you put the oil in, not to put oil on the open end of the pipe - it might affect the adherence of glue to pipe. Also the glue must be extremely hot.
When done, carefully bend the wires outside the tube to 90 degrees, and cover that with glue - to make sure when/if you pull them you won't get oil out. (like in the last picture, and put some glue on that)
Registered Member #2901
Joined: Thu Jun 03 2010, 01:25PM
Location:
Posts: 837
I know what PMMA is, acrylic ... but I didn't quite understand what he meant with "PMMA epoxy". Unless he meant glueing a PMMA plug with epoxy, which would work.
Radhoo, aren't you worried the oil will slowly dissolve the hot glue? Epoxy isn't that expensive, two 15 ml tubes for 5$. You could always put hot glue on top of the oil, press in a plug and then secure the plug with epoxy. No air bubble, no need to worry about pulling the plug out (the epoxy is a bit more structurally sound). You will only need a very small amount of epoxy.
Registered Member #2431
Joined: Tue Oct 13 2009, 09:47PM
Location: Chico, CA. USA
Posts: 5639
original thread:
From about a year ago....
Patrick wrote ...
OK about the methyl methacrylate, Now IM CONFUSED!!! Im back from physics class but i scaned a picture of the chemistry in question.
please read the back highlitged in yellow.
Anyway, I need to know more about oil insulation, what approximate volts/mil would I expect , what fluid mineral oil, hydraulic fluid? Your sure lutz, that pressure from catastrophic arcing, wont burst with dangerous pressure?
Registered Member #543
Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
I've been pleased with results using laboratory rubber stoppers, which come in a wide range of sizes, and are available plain, or ready bored with one, two, or three holes, through which wires can be channeled in glass, ceramic, or plastic tubes.
With care, you can thread a wire through a melting point capillary tube, wrap that round with self-adhesive copper foil, and insert that inside a second wider tube also shielded with foil, to make a guarded triaxial connection.
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