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

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

Philco 46-480 Electronic Restoration
#74

My gut feeling is that the automotive gasket paper would be adequate, but I hesitate to provide a definite "yes". Gasket paper has a similar composition to fish paper (i.e., it is a fibrous material which is impregnated with rubber), but the manufacturer intends for it to be a pressure seal with good thermal insulation rather than electrical insulation. Thus, I doubt that the dielectric strength per mil of thickness has been quantified.

Now that I know that the purpose of this paper is to shield against accidental contact between the can (which is tied to the chassis ground) and its inner components (connected to B voltage), that's the only reason I hesitate to say yes. But, you can certainly run a test! You might try using the high voltage output of a transformer, with an ammeter in series. Do not short circuit this setup, but rather place a piece of your automotive gasket in the circuit (transformer high voltage -> ammeter -> gasket paper -> return to transformer). Make sure to press the leads onto opposite faces of the gasket paper. You need to be making secure contact with the paper, so tape the leads down to it. Energize the circuit and let it run for 10 or 15 minutes under supervision. If it is adequate for electrical insulation, then you should see no measurable current on the ammeter and the gasket paper should show no signs of melting, burning, or darkening in color. If it passes the test, then I'm sure you're fine to use it for this application. Just don't do it for commercial purposes.

This is all coming from a transmission power engineer, so I am likely providing worst-case insight. We must be very careful about insulation and grounding at those sorts of voltages.

Joseph

Philco 46-480
Philco 49-906


Messages In This Thread
RE: Philco 46-480 Electronic Restoration - by jrblasde - 01-26-2025, 11:18 AM



Users browsing this thread: 18 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
The list of my radio & TV collection!
Hello Peter, Thank you for posting that !! Sincerely Richardradiorich — 09:40 AM
Eico 232 VTVM Schematic
It's a microwave antenna. ?;-p?. I substituted 1N4002s off the 6.3 vac winding for the 1.5 volt battery. Uniprobe is the...RodB — 05:50 PM
Eico 232 VTVM Schematic
Try BAMA for a schematic. Looks like a replacement power source for the D battery has been installed. The tube may be...Chas — 04:51 PM
Eico 232 VTVM Schematic
Is that a battery holder?morzh — 04:43 PM
Eico 232 VTVM Schematic
A friend gave me this Eico 232 VTVM and I'm having trouble locating the schematic for it. This one seems to be a later v...RodB — 04:17 PM
Var resistor id
Considering what it is in series with, I doubt there should be any power requirements. Of course, we should know wher...morzh — 03:23 PM
Var resistor id
Trim pot, about 1/2 watt part of focus divider. As stated 2k ohms. This appears to be a rusty chassis, resolder all ...Chas — 03:19 PM
Var resistor id
Its a Sylvania 400 oscilloscope. here is a clip of r-100. Would be nice to know the current required. Not listed in part...Martinj — 02:10 PM
The list of my radio & TV collection!
Thanks Richard. I hope you enjoy it. Here I have created an English section on the history of radio with videos in Engl...RadioSvit — 10:23 AM
The list of my radio & TV collection!
Hello RadioSvit, first all happy new year ! I will watch your new videos this week. Sincerely Richardradiorich — 09:19 AM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 6168 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 6167 Guest(s)
Avatar

>