"N_Cook" wrote in message news:ll2qtd$cvd$1...@dont-email.me...
This may or may not be relevant, but useful to know:
I recently bought some of this stuff to repair an unobtainable fader on a
vintage synthesiser:
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Conductive-Wire-Glue-Paint-NO-Soldering-Iron-Gun-Solder-/320599571856?pt=UK_Home_Garden_PowerTools_SM&hash=item4aa5393d90
It turned out to have rather a higher resistance than I anticipated, but I
got it to work in the end.
I tried a line of it on a piece of paper, maybe 5mm wide, and it had
hundreds of ohms per millimetre when dry, which sounds similar to the OP's
experience.
However, it does work well as a glue, and it is a damn sight cheaper than
any of the other silver loaded conductive epoxy's I came across.
My problem was the fader's earth tag was not connected to the start of the
track, so I had to glue a very fine wire onto the metallised section of the
track end that connects the carbon track to the pin, and feed the wire
through a tiny drilled hole to the outside world. The contact wipers sit on
this metallised section at zero, so it had to be connected right on the edge
so as not to foul the wiper.
Simply dropping a blob of this glue onto the wire and track produced 300 to
400 ohms of connection resistance, meaning the fader would not zero.
I had to bend and hold the wire in such a way that the end couple of
millimetres were actually sitting flush on the track. Not easy. Dropping the
glue onto this arrangement eventually produced a solid join of around 20
ohms resistance, which was enough for the synthesiser to read the zero as a
zero. (faders used as potentiometers feeding a DAC)
Cheers,
Gareth.