โMar-24-2016 10:51 AM
โApr-07-2016 04:34 PM
deepdoc1 wrote:
or put nothing inside, just button it up and go? Thanks!
โApr-07-2016 12:11 PM
โMar-26-2016 09:27 AM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
I've seen strands of copper annealed "pink (red) until they felt like strands of a paint-brush under pressure of a finger. These problems usually occur at the wire-to-terminal socket of plug and socket and not between the actual plug and socket themselves. My made-up plug on Quicksilver is soldered to the wire. I have a made-it-myself steel and plastic plug insert to check socket prong tightness one at a time. I cannot tell you how many single slots I found loose as a goose. Yet if a regular plug is inserted, it feels "tight enough"
Simply remove one tang from a plug. Get a block of wood then roughly gouge out a fox hole just big enough to hide the base of the pin. Use JB Weld to epoxy the base of the pin to the wood. I used a large knob to grip with.
Checking socket tang tightness is a heck of a lot easier than replacing a plug.
Insert plug into socket to be checked. It should fit tight. Then try and twist the tool. It should not twist -at all-
โMar-25-2016 03:30 PM
โMar-25-2016 11:08 AM
โMar-25-2016 11:06 AM
โMar-25-2016 08:17 AM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
This is where I must strongly disagree. If the contacts are discolored, they are annealed. You can shine them until they are like mirrors, but without a tight fit, armageddon is inevitable. Especially if operated near max capacity. You cannot buff resilience back into a spring. Contacts have "wipers" whose actions vanish forever if overheated. Too many times I have seen campers spend hours disassembling and shining contacts only to see disaster arrive a few weeks more. You might get away with shining up a plug if it isn't burned too bad, but not a socket. Once overheated it has had the course.
NOTICE THE WORD "DISCOLORED" It has significant meaning here
โMar-25-2016 05:43 AM
โMar-24-2016 06:52 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Smearing Silicone Grease on the contacts will not hinder conductivity....period.
โMar-24-2016 03:54 PM
โMar-24-2016 03:28 PM
Sam Spade wrote:pianotuna wrote:
I thought silicone dielectric grease was not a good conductor?
It is NOT.
โMar-24-2016 02:52 PM
ktmrfs wrote:
wire gauge is NOT your problem if the prongs or connector are showing heat fatigue. It's likely either a worn out or poorly designed socket and/or plug.
The easiest cure is to cut off the offending ends that are showing heat fatique and replace them with high quality plugs and sockets. Marinco is one such brand but there are others as well.
โMar-24-2016 02:41 PM
โMar-24-2016 01:58 PM
pianotuna wrote:
I thought silicone dielectric grease was not a good conductor?