Michael,
Thanks for the wakeup call. I was a professor. I guess I just can't help it.
I'll try not to let words get in the way again.
Hap
From: michael.salter at gmail.com [mailto:michael.salter at gmail.com] On Behalf
Of Michael Salter
Sent: Friday, February 04, 2011 11:27 AM
To: Hap Polk
Cc: Oudesluys; healeys at autox.team.net
Subject: Re: [Healeys] BN2 80/100 W bulbs on the PL700 tripod headlights....
I'm not sure that we allow $10 words like "ameliorate" on this
list...particularly on Fridays!!!
Michael S
On Fri, Feb 4, 2011 at 1:29 PM, Hap Polk <happolk at cox.net> wrote:
Kees,
I agree. Conservatively rating the wiring lowers resistance drop, runs at
lower temperature, gives stronger connections, is more vibration resistant
(if not soldered), and better absorbs mechanical damage. There are three
reasons to use smaller gauge wiring, cost, weight, and rarely, space.
Aircraft wiring uses smaller gauges for a given load than automobile
practice. Aircraft wire uses thinner higher temperature rated insulation and
the copper wire is tin washed, lowering connection resistance. These
features somewhat ameliorate the higher voltage drop aircraft practice
accepts.
Hap Polk
-----Original Message-----
From: Oudesluys [mailto:coudesluijs at chello.nl]
Sent: Thursday, February 03, 2011 10:00 PM
To: Hap Polk
Cc: 'Richard Ewald'; healeys at autox.team.net
Subject: Re: [Healeys] BN2 80/100 W bulbs on the PL700 tripod headlights....
Solid advise, however I prefer to use ca. 2X (or more) thicker gauge wires
than necessary to minimize resistance and thus heat build up, just to be on
the safe side.
Kees Oudesluijs
NL
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