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On Jun 2, 4:27 pm, ian wrote:
I am thinking of using plain old copper tubing (the type you get from Home Depot) to cool the winding section of a a generator by wrapping a few turns of the copper tubing around the casing and then pumping sea water directly around the tubing. Can anyone advise whether this is going to work? Obviously I don't mind if it gets an ugly blue colour inside the tubing however I don't want to be loosing cooling efficiency with time, or worse have the tubing leak. The reason I don't want to use cuprous nickel is that it is much less malleable than standard copper tubing and I would not be able to simply wrap it around the casing. All ideas and comments appreciated. Ian A German fellow from WW2 (NAZI) showed me a trick that worked fairly well for me. He pinched off one end of the copper tubing and filled the soft copper with sand. Then pinched off the other end. Did all the bending, then cut the ends that were pinched off with a tubing cutter. Not one kink anywhere! No flattened tubing no matter how I twisted and bent it. Drained the dry sand back out after bending. I had to twirl it around, but I could have just blown it out with an air hose. Stick with me Ian, You will be wearing rocks as big as diamonds. My Dad used to say that. |
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