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Dielectric silicone grease or carbon conductive grease?
Boris_yo:
Hello,
Sometimes I stumble upon corroded and green battery contacts in different electronic devices at home.
I was told that I should find dielectric silicon grease because it will inhibit corrosion and oxidation.
Today I discovered conductive grease which said something like this:
--- Quote ---"Wire-line grease, also called contact grease, is a grease designed to increase the area of electrical contacts so that electricity can pass better. Accordingly, such a lubricant conducts electricity. The composition is a neutral plastic grease and some kind of metallic powder. For example, the battery contact has micro-scratches, depressions, dents, etc., grease fills them, increasing the contact area with the terminal. And the larger the contact area, the lower the surface resistance and load."
--- End quote ---
Google returned Amazon page with carbon conductive grease. It appears more suitable for above purpose because
as opposed to dielectric silicone grease it improves conductivity by filling small scratches and pitts on
contacts while offering the rest of dielectric silicone grease's benefits.
In my case I have a battery compartment that I used 800 grit sandpaper to get rid of corrosion and green stuff
and cleaning with 99% IPA and likely caused scratches and pitts. I believe in this case carbon conductive grease
is the solution I should use now.
I also have small electronic devices that require me turning batteries a few times to start functioning. Maybe dielectric
silicone grease would be more suitable in this case? Price-wise I think carbon conductive grease is 3x times more expensive
and maybe is more suitable for professional purposes or for use on delicate electronics. I don't know if carbon conductive
grease is improved version of conductive grease though.
Maybe I should stick with dielectric grease because it is cost-efficient in my case?
Thanks
Gyro:
A tiny dab of Vaseline on the battery tips works wonders. Cheap too.
Boris_yo:
--- Quote from: Gyro on January 13, 2022, 05:38:42 pm ---A tiny dab of Vaseline on the battery tips works wonders. Cheap too.
--- End quote ---
Does it have dielectric properties?
I found 4 greases on AE: https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005003130306629.html
Is there low quality and good quality grease when it comes to buying from China?
Any of them will do the job?
Gyro:
It depends what do you define as dielectric properties when it comes to a grease. It is non-conductive but works by excluding oxygen from the contact area, preventing oxidation and so, maintaining good connection.
Vaseline is specified by some manufacturers of precision resistance boxes as a switch contact lubricant. I use it for such applications (low resistance switches and terminals). In a test I did on intermittent tapered plug contacts on a resistance box, without cleaning, it immediately restored stable low resistance.
I wouldn't bother with products claiming to 'fill in the gaps' with conductive material for simple battery contacts - the current density isn't anywhere near high enough to require it. Your main goal is to prevent oxidation and corrosion of contacts with damaged plating and Vaseline is as good as anything at that job.
If it doesn't work for you then simply wipe it off, no harm done. Silicone compounds are rather tenacious.
BrokenYugo:
I've always just used whatever oil/grease was handy, usually Vaseline or automotive wheel bearing/chassis grease and never had any issues, up to and including lead acid car/truck batteries. EDIT: I've also used actual silicone dielectric grease (e.g. Dow #4), and again, no connection problems, I think the stuff just squishes out at the actual contact point.
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