Here is a subject that has interested me for a while, yet I haven't really addressed it on this forum. The cracking and brittle Wehrmacht wires and cables. I have cables where the rubber is undamaged, flexible and generally in great condition, and then there are cables that are cracked, brittle and generally are falling apart. Why the difference? Is it a early/late war issue? Real rubber versus "Buna"?
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Time / environment damage to German WWII cables and wires
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I belive, beside temperature and sunlight and other obvious environmental conditions, there are also factors we miss at first sight such as contact with other materials. For example - two modern different plastic cables, in contact with each other, develop chemical reaction in the place of contact - you can see there kind of melt-down result. Where those cables don't touch each other - they are OK.
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Originally posted by Funksammler View PostI think it will be difficult to answer definately without in depth chemical analysis. I also noticed that "rotting" cables have a particular smell....
regards,
Funksammler
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I think eventually all original rubber cables will become like this. Sometimes it's a challenge to find new cables that look and feel the same. I was lucky to find a German store that sold a 5-conductor cable that perfectly resembled and felt like the original with my Torn.Fu.b1 remote control unit. Can anyone guess which one has the new cable?Attached Files
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There is. If you can get a deep enough "Schlitz" (slot) on the screw, heat it for 5 minutes with a soldering iron at the highest setting. This allows me to safely unscrew a bad screw in 10 minutes, that would otherwise take 6 months. When you put penetrating oil on these screws first, the rust absorbs this oil, and the intense heat turns the oil+rust into a semi-liquid paste, which allows you to unscrew it without damaging the screw.
For this you MUST have a screwdriver that fits very snugly and deeply into the Schlitz. After the 5 minutes of direct soldering iron application, attempt to unscrew the screw by applying significant (yet not overwhelming) pressure to the screw. If he 1st 5 minutes does not do it, then try for another 5 minutes, etc., Don't worry, that screw will come out intact that same day.
Yuri
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