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13 Replies
- MEXICOWANDERERExplorerI'd better not go with Chinisium or Thaitanium, but stick with Cu. 25' otter do it.
- wa8yxmExplorer IIINote You can get Cat 5/6 Cable both in "Bulk" (No Ends) and "Assembled" in assorted lengths.
You can get screw connection jacks (Radio Shack used to have 'em) and/or Punch Down jacks... Might make extending the cable very very very easy . - MEXICOWANDERERExplorerI use paste flux from Home Depot to solder Cu clad Al. none of my 50 year old soldered to tin plated aluminum work has corroded yet. Have had excellent results with soldering duplex Cu Al. Just as easy as soldering new copper. A blip covers the exposed cut end of the wire just like a solid copper wire. I was shocked to find it was this easy. Use the paste flux and grin. The corrosion thing on non SMD to me is like campfire stories of Sasquatch. Many decades of soldering 18-20 AWG do not lie. Now the liquid acid is Mr Hyde personified. I was forced to use it once on an old International Harvester bulldozer with a 3/0 cable that traveled inside track channels to Nightmare, Nebraska. It worked but neutralizing it was a chore.
- GordonThreeExplorerAnother vote for cat 6 cable. 24 awg utp is what you're after.
China's finest in copper clad aluminum or 4x the cost for American made pure-ish copper. I find it hard to solder to the aluminum stuff. - DrewEExplorer II
rhagfo wrote:
DrewE wrote:
Lots of cat 5 wire (but not all) is not multconductor. It generally depends on whether it's intended for use in walls or racks (not multiconductor) or to connect computers to those things, I suspect.
All Cat 5/6 wire is multi conductor, not all is stranded conductor as opposed to solid conductor.
You're right, and correctly stated what I was attempting to write (but obviously did not). Thanks for pointing out and fixing the confusion. - rhagfoExplorer III
DrewE wrote:
Lots of cat 5 wire (but not all) is not multconductor. It generally depends on whether it's intended for use in walls or racks (not multiconductor) or to connect computers to those things, I suspect.
"Alarm cable" or "Security/alarm cable" is generally stranded and is readily available from various sources. It's rated at higher (line) voltages--and lower frequencies--than cat5/5e/6 wire. Most commonly it comes in four conductors or so, but is available with more including eight.
All Cat 5/6 wire is multi conductor, not all is stranded conductor as opposed to solid conductor.
If you are extending a t-stat, use t-stat wire. If solid conductor t-stat wire was affected by vibration nearly every furnace / AC would not be working. - JesLookinExplorerHow about thermostat wire.
- JaxDadExplorer III
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Time to hunt down an easy to use proxy. Live & learn.
Thanks folks.
Tunnel Bear. For ‘lite’ users it’s free, for more bandwidth it’s cheap. It’s top-drawer stuff.
I routinely acces ‘politically sensitive’ sites from Cuba, no problem. It works, VERY well, ‘nuff said. - DrewEExplorer IILots of cat 5 wire (but not all) is not multconductor. It generally depends on whether it's intended for use in walls or racks (not multiconductor) or to connect computers to those things, I suspect.
"Alarm cable" or "Security/alarm cable" is generally stranded and is readily available from various sources. It's rated at higher (line) voltages--and lower frequencies--than cat5/5e/6 wire. Most commonly it comes in four conductors or so, but is available with more including eight. - MEXICOWANDERERExplorerMaybe I just learned a lesson...
eBay from Mexico is not eBay from the USA. It's nuts. In English with lots of sites missing, even USA and Chinese stuff and this eBay is in English.
Time to hunt down an easy to use proxy. Live & learn.
Thanks folks.
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