[NJARC] [ Some more Solder History for you ]
John Ruccolo
jr6v6gt at yahoo.com
Mon Jul 26 22:09:22 EDT 2010
Hi John,
Do folks down your way refer to solder as "solder wire?"
I think that's an old-time S. Jersey expression.
Regards,
JR (originally from Cumberland County)
----- Original Message ----
From: "John Dilks, K2TQN" <oldradio at comcast.net>
To: "njarc at mailman.qth.net" <njarc at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: Mon, July 26, 2010 8:22:05 PM
Subject: Re: [NJARC] [ Some more Solder History for you ]
Just remember
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Some more Solder History for you...
I have some rolls of Western Electric solder, the King of 60/40. I
used to work there and saved a few pounds for my retirement
projects. Lucky me!
Also Western Electric made Fire Wire. It is made of some low
temperature formula of lead/tin designed to melt during a fire. It
came on a spool and was covered with a red cotton covering, sort of
like old shoe lace material. Typically it was run under, over and
through equipment which was prone to catch fire. Sometimes it was run
hundreds of feet from beginning to end. Each end of the fire wire
was connected to a circuit and a relay so that if there was a fire
and a piece of it melted, the circuit opened, and the relay dropped,
and the fire alarm went off in the telephone office.
It wasn't very strong and had to be supported every few feet. When we
ran cable in the offices sometimes we would break the fire wire when
we dropped the cable from the cable rack above. That was always a
memorable event.
Eventually the telephone company adopted modern fire detection
equipment and the fire wire was retired.
Fire wire didn't have rosin in the center.
73, John Dilks, K2TQN
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