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[personal profile] venta
...but it might just work.

Does anybody have/have access to glue which will conduct electricity ? Would they be prepared to let me have a little blob of it ?

Those who take a paternal interest in William, my elderly Peugeot, may remember that he developed dodgy electrics on the way to Whitby. Investigation has eventually revealed that the root cause of the blown fuses was (as suspected) the heated rear window. Notably, the metal connecting plate has come unstuck from the window. So I need to glue it back on again.

No, silver paint isn't any use. I know it's conductive, but it's not adhesive.

No, you can't buy conductive glue from your average spare car parts place. The man in Holloway Auto told me that I might be best off going to a place that fits windscreens and trying to beg a dollop from them. Since this is useful information, I didn't murder him for being very patronising in the rest of the conversation. Any suggestions of where I might find a friendly windscreen-doing establishment in Oxford appreciated, too.

I'm led to believe that conductive adhesive pads exist, but can't find them anywhere either.

I know araldite is supposed to be slightly conductive; probably not enough, though.

On an entirely irrelevant note, if anyone sees hide or hair of Jez this week, can they tell him to contact Andy at his earliest possible convenience ? Thanks.

And on a not entirely irrelevant note: bad news for Oxford car owners. Swan Motors, reliable garage and MOTer of grotty old cars, has closed :(

Date: 2003-12-02 03:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wimble.livejournal.com
I've got some aluminium tape, which describes itself as "Adhesive Metal Foil Tape". It's a bit like metallic gaffa tape, claiming you can "use it as a backing material when filling in rust holes in car panels. Accepts cellulose paint." So it's fairly tough, fairly sticky stuff.

I'm not sure if it's conductive, especially on the sticky side. But can't hurt to try. Or use it to hold some genuinely conductive foil in place.

After all, I've already got it, so it's free to experimenters.

Date: 2003-12-03 03:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
I think I'd need it to be double sided, though, to stick one thing to another... if I'm just going to stick the thing on with tape, I don't need (and in fact actively wouldn't want) it to be conductive.

Onebyone suggested (in person, not on here) that I just use gaffer tape to cobble the whole thing together, and to be honest that's looking appealing. It's cheap, easy, and (more to the point) reversible if unsuccessful.

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