[Heathkit] Soup

Jim Shorney jshorney at inebraska.com
Thu Aug 11 00:46:25 EDT 2005


On Wed, 10 Aug 2005 21:18:38 -0700, guy driver wrote:

>Well I have an Old (isn't it all) Cantenna that has been emptyed of the oil. 
>  Can't seem to be able to find any transformer oir around here.  So the 
>same old question as to what " soup" will work best?

>From a note I posted here back in April:

>From the 1985 Radio Amateur's Hanbook, pp.34-17 to 34-19:

Selection of the coolant for the resistor involved a lengthly
investigation. The use of PCB transformer oils is illegal and involves
a serious health hazard. The investigation did identify several
modern-day transformer and heat transfer oils that could be used, but
none are available for purchase in any quantity less than a 55-gallon
drum. Transformer oil has lower viscosity. That means lower resistor
tepmeratures, but at the penalty of using an oil with a 140 to 150 C
flash point (vaporization temperature). Transformer oil is also treated
to remove water, but maintaining this dry condition is difficult and
expensive. Calculations of the fluid heat transfer show that turbulent
nature convection flow exists for rated power levels. The use of higher
viscosity oil produces higher resistor temperatures, but the gain in
flash point temperature is greater than the rise in resistor
temperature. Oils designed for heat transfer have flash points in the
230 to 250 C region.

  Heat transfer oils are composed predominantly of mineral oil. Highly
refined or medicinal mineral oil has a usably high flash point but at
an undesirably high cost. Heat transfer oils contain small amounts of
rust and oxidation inhibitors, making them preferable to mineral oils.
Heat transfer oils are not available in small quantities, but in at
least one case the very same product is relabeled and sold in 5 gallon
cans for service as a "turbine oil". That product is sold by TEXACO
distributors as Regal Oil R&O No. 46.

  Use of automotive and transmission oils is undesirable. They are
composed of a wide mixture of oils with different flash points. Motor
oil additives will damage the metal platings on an RF resistor. There
is no danger in the short term use of automotive oils, but the
long-term effects are a problem. Further, there are no economic
advantages with automotive oils, as they cost as much as turbine oil.

--from the "Super Dummy" construction article, designed by ARRL TA Dick
Jansson, WD4FAB.

I think last time I heard, a gallon of the good stuff (Vet. grade
mineral oil) was around 12 bucks at a local farm supply store. YMMV if
you are not in an agricultural area. I haven't researched the price of
Regal R&O, I only have two good cantennas (and a third that I smoked
due to low oil level) and 5 gallons is a little in excess of my needs.

-- 
Jim Shorney      -->.<--Put complaints in this box
jshorney (at) inebraska.com
nu0c (at) amsat.org
Ham Radio NU0C
Lincoln, NE, USA
EN10ps
http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney/



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