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 11-17-2009, 08:28 Post: 166873
kwschumm



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  Dielectric antioxidant grease

I am replacing all the switches and connectors on our generator due to an amazing amount of electrical glitches caused by bad connections, likely due to oxidation. I was thinking about placing dielectric grease on all the connections but after googling for that it seems that opinions are all over the map on this.

Some say that the connection should be made with the contact points dry and the grease applied afterwards. Others say that the grease should be placed on the contacts and a solid connection will displace the grease and allow a good connection. I can see how grease on contacts first would allow the best protection from oxidation but can also see that, as an insulator, the grease could compromise the connection.

Any opinions here on this? The particular product I have is called an anti-oxidant grease that is recommended for aluminum-copper connections in home wiring.






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 11-17-2009, 09:40 Post: 166875
Murf



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  Dielectric antioxidant grease

Ken, we use copious amounts of the stuff, Loc-tite brand in our case, on nearly everything.

The directions that come with it say to clean the parts, coat them in dielectric grease and then re-assemble them.

The theory is that you want the contact to be complete encapsulated in the product, so by using the connection to displace the excess you know it's well coated.

BTW, after a many years of pretty harsh conditions (snow plowing, salting, etc.) we're still very satisfied with this particular product.


Best of luck.






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 11-17-2009, 09:55 Post: 166876
kwschumm



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  Dielectric antioxidant grease

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Originally Posted by Murf | view 166875
Ken, we use copious amounts of the stuff, Loc-tite brand in our case, on nearly everything.The directions that come with it say to clean the parts, coat them in dielectric grease and then re-assemble them.The theory is that you want the contact to be complete encapsulated in the product, so by using the connection to displace the excess you know it's well coated.BTW, after a many years of pretty harsh conditions (snow plowing, salting, etc.) we're still very satisfied with this particular product.Best of luck.



Thanks, Murf. That seems to be the opinion of the folks in the marine industry as well but there are a whole bunch of people who disagree (and rarely with any data but the theoretical "it's non-conductive" line). I'll do as you suggest and even buy some of the loctite brand stuff.






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 11-17-2009, 10:04 Post: 166877
auerbach



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  Dielectric antioxidant grease

One kind of stuff to put on electric connections is insulative (or "potting"Wink yeah right, and given a good connection you can safely spill it wherever. But dielectric is the opposite -- it is conductive. (No more problems with my trailer connections after I started applying it to both ends.) Just be careful to not get it where you don't want it conducting current.






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 11-17-2009, 12:26 Post: 166880
kwschumm



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  Dielectric antioxidant grease

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Originally Posted by auerbach | view 166877
One kind of stuff to put on electric connections is insulative (or "potting"Wink yeah right, and given a good connection you can safely spill it wherever. But dielectric is the opposite -- it is conductive. (No more problems with my trailer connections after I started applying it to both ends.) Just be careful to not get it where you don't want it conducting current.



That's the thing, I don't think it is. Merriam Websters defines dielectric as "a nonconductor of direct electric current". Some people say it conducts, others say it doesn't. I guess it's time to put a gob of it on a piece of glass and measure the resistance.






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 11-17-2009, 13:01 Post: 166881
Murf



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  Dielectric antioxidant grease

Quote:
Originally Posted by auerbach | view 166877
But dielectric is the opposite -- it is conductive. (No more problems with my trailer connections after I started applying it to both ends.) Just be careful to not get it where you don't want it conducting current.



I think you've got the terms confused friend. The very term "dielectric" means it is insulating, or non-conductive.

There is another type of grease that is conductive though.


Best of luck.






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 11-17-2009, 14:16 Post: 166882
auerbach



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  Dielectric antioxidant grease

I haven't been so misinformed since "After we're married, dear, any time you want."






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 11-17-2009, 14:27 Post: 166883
kwschumm



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  Dielectric antioxidant grease

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Originally Posted by auerbach | view 166882
I haven't been so misinformed since "After we're married, dear, any time you want."



Laughing out loud, there 'ya go. You shouldn't have showed her that tube of dielectric grease after the ceremony.






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 11-17-2009, 15:31 Post: 166884
Murf



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  Dielectric antioxidant grease

Where's the 'biting my tongue' smiley? Wink yeah right






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 04-11-2010, 16:16 Post: 169927
GaleHawkins



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  Dielectric antioxidant grease

I am not sure this search cleared up much for me but it was funny in the end. Smile






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Discussion Boards > Active Subjects > Messages as Posted > Generators Forum

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