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Rick,
Impressive. Glad you are speaking from personal experience. I respect that and what you say, but do not agree with you about this. I shrink mine from the middle out to squeeze out excess RTV. I have not made connectors like this for deep sea operations. The requested application was for up on a mast for lighting. The RTV will work fine and outlast the light fixtures. Acetic acid corrosion has not been an issue on any of the ones I have made up and/or repaired. Wicking can happen if under pressure, but I usually only need NEMA4 type connections. I have more problems from oil or chemical contaminates. Most of my connections are made up by crimping, soldering and heat shrinking. The RTV was used (and will be again) for added insurance. I am speaking of the silicon 1 part type that can be purchased by DIYs. Normally I use the Dow Corning red...cannot remember the number right now, but I buy by the 12 pack for use on gaskets for test fixtures. I currently design and build test fixtures for Whirlpool's product development labs, and am a Controls Engineer by profession. For years I designed and built control systems for automated production, assembly, or testing for the US Navy, Chrysler, Ford, Bosch, etc. and am semi-retired now. Incidentally, your work experience sounds like fun to me. How do you still sail in the Merchant Marine and also find time to teach? Greg Luckett "Rick" wrote in message link.net... Greg wrote: As a guess, you have no direct experience using it? If so, tell about what you actually did? Guessed wrong. 8-) Worked with building, maintaining, and operating manned deep submersibles to 2000 meters, plus ROV operations and surface marine industry for over 30 years with a break to go airline flying for a few years between seagoing endeavors. Am still sailing in the merchant marine and teach propulsion and sometimes electrical classes at a maritime academy. We made up many of our own cables for submersible work and repaired those that we had commercially built. When I spliced a DC power cable that supplied my life-support system a mile underwater I did not even consider using a silicone sealant anywhere on the splice. The only place we would use those sealants was to seal rubber gaskets in on devices that were not subject to more than minor pressure differentials. The RTV you are referring to may be the 2-part compound that is not readily available to or commonly used by the DIY'er. Common references to RTV are to the single component acetic acid and moisture cured material found in home stores and recreational boat shops. It will not bond to the wiring jacket and water will wick into the splice. It will corrode the conductors. It may take a year or so depending on how severe the exposure and how well the rest of the splice was made but it will wick and the joint will corrode and fail. Rick -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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