I don't believe knowing who controls your borders is minutia and I am positive your government agrees with me.
If you're looking for the original bashing, conflict and trolling spirit, you can check out a few dna 40 clone threads as well as one or the other yihi thread. That's where the action is now. This thread is now only for happy owners expressing their love towards the dna 40.
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Regards
Tony
Sent from my keyboard through my phone or something like that.
I was reading along with you than, at least in the passed four or five pages but I didn't notice anyone using any silver content solders, or did I miss it?I was enjoying the discussion on soldering tips and working with the board.
So. Popping in. Here's a build that I've run approx 100 mls, and maybe 5 to 6 rewick. Sharing this because I've been dry burning my coils to clean it. Resistance and performance has been holding up so far
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The wire has definitely gotten a ton more malleable, and requires me using a tiny flat head screw driver to reestablish the spacing after i rewick
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I have you tried quenching your coils while hot with cold water?
I have you tried quenching your coils while hot with cold water?
Nope. Not sure if that's a good idea.
It's kinda hard to explain what dry burning does to the wire. Perhaps malleable wasn't a good word. But like what woofer said, it definitely becomes pretty damn brittle, while still being easily deformed. Perhaps someone else can describe it better haha
But anyways my point was more that dry burning the wire inherently makes it more brittle. Quenching any metal will only exacerbate the problem, so I would rather not do it. There has been a few times when I dry burn a wire the first or second time, and it kinda just snaps when I'm rewicking it.
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I've been experimenting with coils enough that I have only use cold water on red hot Ni200 twice now, once on two different coils, one 28 gauge and one triple twisted 32 gauge, no issues for me so far.
Malleable and brittle at the same time I don't understand, they're about opposites.
It's true, I've experienced the same thing after multiple dry-burns. I'd call it flimsy and brittle.
Glad you tried it and reported back!
It is definitely worthwhile to me and I will continue to dry burn, how about you?
..Tbh im personally not concerned about carbon leaching at all, even if inhaled. Im skeptical that the health effects are significant at all, given the sheer negligible amounts of carbon in it to begin with, and also the physiological effects of carbon.
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I just wiped some Ni200 very clean with alcohol and torched the bejeebers out of it. You can see the dull carbon on the surface very clearly and the wire loses its polished metal feel. However, wiping the wire very hard repeatedly with a white paper towel leaves the towel perfectly clean so the carbon isn't powdery at all. I don't see how it could be inhaled.
The loss of ductility is noticeable but not dramatic.
