Hi Dave-
I gather the other popular wire wrap wire is teflon insulated; one
common brand name is "Kynar", and you are right, the insulation is
actually resistant to melting, as the web page you included points out.
If you find a ready source of the polyurethane coated wire I'd be
interested, since the melt-insulation-solder-wire procedure is great
for those traces you need to add after the PCB has been etched <g>.
That's what I am using the RS wire wrap wire for but it won't last
forever.
Here's the stuff I am talking about-
RS 278-502
See:
http://www.radioshack.ca/estore/category.aspx?language=en-CA&catalog=RadioShack&category=Hook+Up+Wire&pagenum=1Seems that does have kynar insulation, but it melted ok on my last
patch up. But it seems like you need the PUE insulated type. Oh well.
Grant
--- In
Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Dave Hylands" <dhylands@b...>
wrote:
> Hi Grant,
>
> > Dave - my local Radio Shack here in Toronto sells wire wrap wire,
> > about 28 gauge, with a thin insulation which reasily melts away when
> > soldered. It was on a spool about 2" in diameter. The one I have has
> > no RS number. But perhaps it's worth checking in a store. It was on
> > sale, it looks like they are unloading some hobbyist stuff.
>
> Thanks - I'll check it out. I have some wire wrap wire (can't remember
> where I got it), but the insulation seems to have a mind of its own, and
> only melts when you don't want it to.
>
> I'm also running down a lead on some 130C polyurethane coated wire (the
> insulation supposedly melts around 600F)
>
> --
> Dave Hylands
> Vancouver, BC, Canada
> http://www.DaveHylands.com/