Ned Gravel Posted November 15, 2010 Report Posted November 15, 2010 Day before yesterday, after landing, the rheostat that runs the shoulder lights felt like it had rusted in place and was very hard to turn off. Has anyone ever run into this before? Is it curable with WD40? Or Triflow? If I need to buy a new pot, is it difficult to remove? 1 Quote
N601RX Posted November 15, 2010 Report Posted November 15, 2010 I looked at mine when I had the console down and believe they were made by Ohmite. I don't remember the wattage or resistance, but I use a lot of Ohmite products at work and they are usually stocked by allied electronics. http://www.alliedelec.com/search/searchresults.aspx?N=0&Ntk=Primary&Ntt=reostat Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted November 16, 2010 Report Posted November 16, 2010 Just lube the shaft with your favorite lube. There is nothing in that rheostat that you will hert. Quote
Ned Gravel Posted November 16, 2010 Author Report Posted November 16, 2010 Quote: N201MKTurbo Just lube the shaft with your favorite lube. There is nothing in that rheostat that you will hert. Quote
fantom Posted November 17, 2010 Report Posted November 17, 2010 WD-40 is thin snake oil, especially compared to TriFlow <")"> Quote
DaV8or Posted November 17, 2010 Report Posted November 17, 2010 Triflow is flammable too. If you are worrid about sparks and fires, I would try contact cleaner first. Quote
fantom Posted November 17, 2010 Report Posted November 17, 2010 Quote: DaV8or Triflow is flammable....... Quote
carusoam Posted November 18, 2010 Report Posted November 18, 2010 Fantom, Did I miss something....? From the website source you gave, it appears that Tri-Flow is flammable as Dave suggested, at least during its delivery and early application....It appears that the solvent and propellant can be flammable. The extreme condition that you reference may be an electrical spark. The data sheet does indicate to use in a well ventilated area and then gives the following safety codes. HMIS (NFPA RATING): HMIS = Hazardous Materials Information System2, 4, 0 reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMIS_Color_Bar Health = 2 of 4 Flammability = 4 of 4 Physical Hazard = 0 of 4 Tri-Flow contents include: mineral oil - flammable? PTFE = teflon - Listed as non-flammable, but with high dielectric strength (is it OK to pump a high dielectric product into a rheostat??) http://www.druflon.com/ptfeprop.html hydrocarbon propellant - also flammable. It seems that the Tri-Flow website is indicating a relative level of flammability. I like Tri-flow as a lubricant on mechanical devices. While lubricating this one, I would leave the power switch off until it has an opportunity to dry..... My milage varied.... -a- Quote
Ned Gravel Posted November 18, 2010 Author Report Posted November 18, 2010 So, next piece of news on this one. First - no lubrication on any of it. It appears, from the experience of someone who knows enough about these puppies, that any spray or lubrication without first taking it out is a bad idea. This was sent to me by one of our list members. "Lubricant on the shaft would not hurt anything, but it will migrate to the wiper and cause a high resistance connection between the wiper and wire coil, and will get very hot and start smoking. These can be taken apart and cleaned. If the shaft is sticking, just take some fine grit (400 or higher) sandpaper and clean it up, If the wiper is sticking and looks burnt, the wound wire core can be cleaned up with fine paper also. If it is very badly burnt it would be best to replace it. My guess is that if it is sticking it is because of worn, rough or burnt places on the surface of the wiper or where it runs around the coil." Here is what it looks like. As well, according to Clarence (the owner of my MSC) it is a Clarostst p/n #25-25. So now I have to try and figure out a way to take it down from the overhead panel and inspect it to either clean it or replace it. Thanks for all your very good information. Quote
DaV8or Posted November 18, 2010 Report Posted November 18, 2010 Quote: fantom ????? Maybe under extreme conditions, but I'd suggest you post some source data. http://www.triflowlubricants.com/pdf/2009marchtflubesellsheet.pdf YMMV Quote
fantom Posted November 19, 2010 Report Posted November 19, 2010 Better check that contact cleaner as well ;-) The warning on the can may be for the can. Acually the old salts at my airport use ACF 50 as a contact cleaner, but I've not checked it's flash point, nor do I pay much attention to legal warning notices on most products. In any event, TriFlow is suggested often in my Mooney Service Manual, I've been using it for 20 years, and I'm still here. Of course my milage could be better. 1 Quote
DaV8or Posted November 19, 2010 Report Posted November 19, 2010 Quote: fantom Better check that contact cleaner as well ;-) Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted November 19, 2010 Report Posted November 19, 2010 There is a big difference between what comes out of the can and what is left after the solvents evaporate. If you just put a drop or two on the shaft, there won't be enough left behind to make much fire if any. The rheostat probably just needs to be cleaned, use CRC chlorinated brake parts cleaner, the red stuff not the green. The red is 1,1,1 tetrachloroethylene which is non-flammable, the green is alcohol which is very flammable, but it will all evaporate. Quote
bradtlew Posted February 8, 2015 Report Posted February 8, 2015 Hi Ned, I see this is a pretty old thread, but have a similar question. However, looks like people were more about the MSDS of lubricants? I have '65 M20C that I need to pull the Single overhead rheostat down and was wondering if you had any tips or tricks? looks like it's behind the vent?? Thanks, -Bradtlew Quote
Ned Gravel Posted February 9, 2015 Author Report Posted February 9, 2015 Bradtlew: I pulled the headliner, took out the old insulation, pulled the vent box off and replaced the rheostat. I put everything back, including a speaker where the old one was missing, and the foam insulation. Now I have a rheostat that works, a speaker connected to my audio panel and a quieter interior. Took about a day to get it all done. But I am sorry, I do not have any pictures. It was done in 2011. Ned Gravel Lucky steward of C-FSWR, a '65 E model at Rockcliffe, Ontario, (CYRO) Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Quote
Marauder Posted February 9, 2015 Report Posted February 9, 2015 I've been meaning to ask my northern friends this... Since you have a lot of letters in your C numbers, is it harder to recognize your call sign when everyone seems to be saying the alphabet? Quote
Piloto Posted February 10, 2015 Report Posted February 10, 2015 I just replaced the rheostat with a switch. It is more reliable and less prone to start a fire. After all the panel lights are not that bright and at night is like in IMC conditions. Navigating today at night is not like the old days were you were looking for the rotating beacon or the lighthouse using red lighted compasses. Even cars have GPS. José Quote
Ned Gravel Posted February 11, 2015 Author Report Posted February 11, 2015 I've been meaning to ask my northern friends this... Since you have a lot of letters in your C numbers, is it harder to recognize your call sign when everyone seems to be saying the alphabet? Nope. Quote
Ned Gravel Posted February 11, 2015 Author Report Posted February 11, 2015 I use the new red shoulder LEDs to illuminate only the MP and the Tach parked at the far right of the panel (See the photo taken during a Fam flight with my neighbour's nephew) and the flap indicator down by the Johnson bar. Clarence put Nulites in the panel when I bought C-FSWR, but those two instruments did not have enough room for one, so they were left out. My shoulder lights were only for these two uses. I can still use the dimmer pot on them because the underpanel light is also on the same circuit and it is an incandescent light. 1 Quote
TheTurtle Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 so I released all the blue smoke from my rheostat today.. Took the headliner down and it's burnt on the coils. I found a bunch of different Ohmite 8ohm rheostats but does anybody know the wattage? 12.5w seems to low? 25w? Quote
M20F-1968 Posted January 12, 2017 Report Posted January 12, 2017 I may have a replacement for you from my 67 F. If you need a replacement I'll look through my parts. John Breda 1 Quote
TheTurtle Posted January 13, 2017 Report Posted January 13, 2017 (edited) 11 hours ago, M20F-1968 said: I may have a replacement for you from my 67 F. If you need a replacement I'll look through my parts. John Breda looks like they are only $50 or so. This annual has been painfulish (found a cracked exhaust downtube thats getting welded for im sure way more than its worth, a ripoff of an eddy current inspection and on and on so whats another $50 to never think about it again. thanks for the offer though for anybody looking for this later the one in it was 25watt. 1.77 amp max at 8ohms. heres the link to the part at Mouser. http://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Ohmite/RHS8R0E/?qs=sGAEpiMZZMtC25l1F4XBUwuUYO8VJoEE091BXc58FNA%3d Edited January 13, 2017 by TheTurtle Quote
Hector Posted January 15, 2017 Report Posted January 15, 2017 I converted the torpedo shoulder lights to LEDs and I like it a lot. The rheostat used to get so hot I could hardly touch it. With the LEDs it stays nice and cool and I can dim the LEDs as needed. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk 1 Quote
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