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Thread: Silver Plated Brass Stock ???

  1. #1
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    Default Silver Plated Brass Stock ???

    I'm wondering if anyone has a source for silver plated brass strips or thin sheets like shim stock?
    I have a small electrical restoration project in the works that requires a few silver plated brass straps that I need to make
    The originals are cracked, must have been hard brass!! They are .010 thick x 1/2" in width. Either strips or sheets will do.
    Why the silver plating you ask?????? My guess is silver is a good electrical conductor that won't corrode.

    JL.....................

  2. #2
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    Silver corrodes readily--hence silver polish. Gold is known as the incorruptible metal and also is an excellent conductor. Nickel over brass or copper may be your best bet.
    Larry on Lake Superior

  3. #3
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    Silver plated? Possibly, but I think you will find it's been tin plated. I've seen lots of brass connectors/terminals that have been tin plated for corrosion resistance.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Arcane View Post
    Silver plated? Possibly, but I think you will find it's been tin plated. I've seen lots of brass connectors/terminals that have been tin plated for corrosion resistance.
    I've seen it too but this is silver plated for sure, not tin.

    JL................

  5. #5
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    Silver oxide is conductive, and it cleans well from the contacts "wiping" against each other, so silver was often used for contacts.

    Dan
    Last edited by danlb; 08-24-2012 at 09:21 PM.
    Measure twice. Cut once. Weld. Repeat.
    ( Welding solves many problems.)

  6. #6
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    Joe
    When I made the clock face on my Monitor engine , I wanted to also have Silver plated brass, but could not find any.
    I guess you could buy a silver kit from Caswell, but the price is high for such a small job.
    There are "immersion plating solutions" much cheaper but they have no abrasion resistance
    So what I did was flycut some flat brass to get a superfinished (mirror ) surface, and then fluxed the
    surface and melted 50/50 solder and immediately wiped it off, leaving a beautiful silver colored surface
    Here is a pic of the clock which is .500" in diameter
    Rich


    PS
    The lettering on the steam gauge in the middle is only .018" tall

  7. #7
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    Are you sure the silver plated metal is brass and not copper? I did a quick search and found many sources for silver plated copper for electrical and electronic use, but most silver plated brass is jewelry.

    McMaster has silver plated copper bars:

    http://www.mcmaster.com/#silver-plated-copper/=izyiyw

    Of course, they will not be plated at any cuts or holes that you drill. There are many silver plating references on the web and I suspect that the normal practice is to make the part first from non-plated stock and then have it plated overall.
    Paul A.

    Make it fit.

  8. #8
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    If the part is moving and flexes it is probably silver plated beryllium bronze (copper). It is much springier than generic brass and copper.

  9. #9
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    You can buy a wipe-on silver plating powder. Add water and wipe it on copper or brass. It is for plating electrical connections. One brand I've used is called "Cool-AMP". I can't recall where it was purchased from, google ought to help out.

  10. #10
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    As Rich wrote, you can get a very shiny plate using some of the newer ROHS compliant solders

    I use a bath of solder with a few flux crystals to plate my test pcbs.



    You could also tin plate it with one of the Thiourea type plating solutions (but these have become quite expensive now).

    Rob

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