Welcome Guest! Be sure you know and follow the Phorum Rules before posting. Thank you and Enjoy! (January 12) x

Thread Closed
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Liquid Electric Tape
#1

Home Depot sells this stuff called Liquid Electric Tape. Seems like it would be good for reinsulating bad wires. All you have to do is paint it on and let it dry.

Has anyone tried this or have any thoughts on this stuff?

-Brandon
#2

There are some people who like this stuff. Personally, I won't use it on rubber insulation; I would rather replace the insulation. That way, I know the insulation is all new, and won't fail for a long time.

I use heat shrink tubing in various colors. I unsolder one end of a wire and remove the crumbly old insulation. Then I cut a new piece of heat shrink tubing to the correct length and shrink it with a source of heat (often by moving it across the chimney of an Aladdin lamp, which produces a lot of heat...too much to put your hand over it without getting a nasty burn right away!). Then, I put this tubing over the old wire, resolder in place, move on to the next wire, etc., until all of the old rubber insulation has been replaced.

It is very time-consuming...but I would rather do the job once and do it right, so I no longer have to worry about insulation falling off wires.

--
Ron Ramirez
Ferdinand IN
#3

Your way sounds like a much better fix. I was thinking about it anyway, the liquid tape could get really messy under the chasis anyway.

Thanks for your input, Ron.

-Brandon
#4

Liquid electrical tape is about as good as using wire nuts for making automotive electrical repairs. (It's a temporary solution.) I'm with Ron - replace those bad wires.

Brian Mattson
Coon Rapids, MN




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
A Marconi model 86
Dan; I've seen some Marconi sets like that before, one was a console though I'm not sure if it was a model 86. It's a...Arran — 05:09 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Milkjug plastic? Whatever is chosen for the spider, the material must be compatible with popular adhesives... Th...Chas — 05:05 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Mike; I would not use plastic from a milk jug for a spider, first it's polyethylene/polypropylene which resists most ...Arran — 04:56 PM
Philco model 60
This is my thread on 60 from 2016. I had to rewind the osc coil, and I actually counted the turns and then rewound i...morzh — 03:34 PM
Philco model 60
Yes, Mark belongs to the same Michigan Antique Radio Club that I do. I suspect that the oscillator coil is in need of a ...Radios1340 — 03:10 PM
A Marconi model 86
Yeah. I am dreading the thought of what to do with all my consoles when I will no longer be able to move them around. I...morzh — 02:51 PM
1947 Silvertone 7086 Wire Recorder/Phono/Radio on YouTube
Cool gadget, Buzz. I took me a couple of second to undestand that that oscillating thing makes the wire to spool correc...morzh — 02:50 PM
A Marconi model 86
My back hurts already, you could build a house with all the wood. PaulPaul Philco322 — 02:49 PM
1947 Silvertone 7086 Wire Recorder/Phono/Radio on YouTube
Part 4 of this series now uploaded link below to anyone interested Buzz — 02:39 PM
Philco model 60
Welcome to the Phorum, Radios1340!  The oscillator coil on the 60 is a common culprit.  I just bought a 60B (June 1934) ...GarySP — 02:33 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 7440 online users. [Complete List]
» 2 Member(s) | 7438 Guest(s)
AvatarAvatar

>