dew resistant tape?
dew resistant tape?
I'm working on a project that involves attaching/ ?taping? wires onto small coin type watch batteries that are strung in the air overnight, when dew and moisture are an issue.
Does anyone have any suggestions on an adhesive/tape that are resistant to moisture resultant from overnight humidity/temp changes/dew? Something that holds up to moisture...maybe absorbs the moisture, without losing it's adhesiveness.
I will not have the time to glue the parts on...it must be quicky applied, and quickly taken apart, so soldering is not an option. The batteries will be reused night to night and the contacts must be applied at the time the lights are put on at night and taken off in the morning.
Thanks.
Does anyone have any suggestions on an adhesive/tape that are resistant to moisture resultant from overnight humidity/temp changes/dew? Something that holds up to moisture...maybe absorbs the moisture, without losing it's adhesiveness.
I will not have the time to glue the parts on...it must be quicky applied, and quickly taken apart, so soldering is not an option. The batteries will be reused night to night and the contacts must be applied at the time the lights are put on at night and taken off in the morning.
Thanks.
I tape EL wire to our bikes on the playa using electrical tape. As long as the tape wraps all the way around the bike tube and wire so that the tape sticks to itself, it stays all week. No worry about dew overnight on the playa; the big killer is dust. If you tape over dust, the tape won't hold. I suspect that's one reason taping all the way around so that the tape sticks to itself works - the back of the tape is clean. Note that it's hard to get the tape off when it's wound all the way around - good for me when I want stuff to stay all week, bad for you when you want quick dissassembly. As usual, try it at home first.I'm working on a project that involves attaching/ ?taping? wires onto small coin type watch batteries that are strung in the air overnight, when dew and moisture are an issue.
- motskyroonmatick
- Posts: 2057
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A good 3M electrical tape works but you must stretch it some and wrap around a corner to get a grip.
Velcro may work better.
I like solder.
You want the 33 tape.
It is available in colors.
I use a lot of white tape.
Some gaffer's tape may stick better but is a pain to remove.
And there is stronger tape.
Most will leave a residue which will interfere with contact.
Velcro may work better.
I like solder.
You want the 33 tape.
It is available in colors.
I use a lot of white tape.
Some gaffer's tape may stick better but is a pain to remove.
And there is stronger tape.
Most will leave a residue which will interfere with contact.
"Everything is more wonderful when you do it with a car, don't you think?"
-girl by the fire, watching a tree moved by car bumper in the bonfire
It would be a shame if I had to resort to self-deception to preserve my faith in objective reality.
-girl by the fire, watching a tree moved by car bumper in the bonfire
It would be a shame if I had to resort to self-deception to preserve my faith in objective reality.
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spectabillis
- Posts: 3527
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Now THAT would be some good tape!spectabillis wrote:am i the only one who read it as "dpw resistant tape?"
Another suggestion- The thick foil-backed duct repair tape used for temporary-to-permanent HVAC repairs. Good adhesive, and sturdy. Use the thicker-than-tinfoil stuff that's about seven-eight bucks a roll, NOT the thin stuff with waxpaper backing MOOP.
Further explaination would help- So, you have to remove the batts daily for charging/replacing? If so, I'd suggest taking a little extra time and making battery boxes or clips as Dork suggests, or soldering per Gyre. (Soldered leads could be attached to all pertinent batteries, and terminated in quick-release ends like automotive wiring.) Depends on how many we're talking about....two? Ten? A thousand?
Howdy From Kalamazoo