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cracks of PVC after aging on AWG wire
- Mr basem kamal eltantawi
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11 years 2 months ago - 11 years 2 months ago #2713
by Mr basem kamal eltantawi
cracks of PVC after aging on AWG wire was created by Mr basem kamal eltantawi
Dear All,
I found small cracks on PVC with nylon that used in AWG wire after aging and flexibility testing. Some sample have cracks and others haven't although we are using same compound. Is there any justification to change the process such as preheating the copper or changing the type of copper itself?.
Please help!.
Basem
I found small cracks on PVC with nylon that used in AWG wire after aging and flexibility testing. Some sample have cracks and others haven't although we are using same compound. Is there any justification to change the process such as preheating the copper or changing the type of copper itself?.
Please help!.
Basem
Last edit: 11 years 2 months ago by Peter J Stewart-Hay.
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11 years 2 months ago - 11 years 2 months ago #2715
by Peter J Stewart-Hay
Regards,
Peter J. Stewart-Hay Principal
Stewart-Hay Associates
www.Stewart-Hay.com
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Replied by Peter J Stewart-Hay on topic Re: cracks of PVC after aging on AWG wire
Hello Basem,
Firstly, you must remember that PVC is a mixture of materials and you have not told us whether or not you are manufacturing your own PVC with a very good machine such as a Kombiplast to ensure uniformity. Poor manufacturing practices can result in variances in properties.
Some other points you should remember.
1 - It is good practice to electrically preheat the copper conductor before it enters the crosshead.
2 - It is good practice to dry the PVC down to a -40C dew point in or just before the extruder hopper. Just recirculating hot air is not the answer as you are not drying the air and the moisture is going around and around.
3 - Changing to an alloy of copper has nothing at all to do with this plastics issue.
Firstly, you must remember that PVC is a mixture of materials and you have not told us whether or not you are manufacturing your own PVC with a very good machine such as a Kombiplast to ensure uniformity. Poor manufacturing practices can result in variances in properties.
Some other points you should remember.
1 - It is good practice to electrically preheat the copper conductor before it enters the crosshead.
2 - It is good practice to dry the PVC down to a -40C dew point in or just before the extruder hopper. Just recirculating hot air is not the answer as you are not drying the air and the moisture is going around and around.
3 - Changing to an alloy of copper has nothing at all to do with this plastics issue.
Regards,
Peter J. Stewart-Hay Principal
Stewart-Hay Associates
www.Stewart-Hay.com
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Last edit: 11 years 2 months ago by Peter J Stewart-Hay.
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