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Date:         Sun, 31 Aug 2014 21:14:02 -0400
Reply-To:     David Beierl <dbeierl@ATTGLOBAL.NET>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         David Beierl <dbeierl@ATTGLOBAL.NET>
Subject:      Re: Terminal/connector source was Fridge on 12V
Comments: To: Rocket J Squirrel <camping.elliott@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To:  <5403BC1B.4080509@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed

At 08:21 PM 8/31/2014, Rocket J Squirrel wrote: >The designer of this plug did what he could to get a good >metal-to-metal connection by bringing the center contact to a really >sharp tip. Resulting in a tiny little contact point.

If you're talking about the real thing, the B+ terminal is a semi-wiping contact on two sides that is forced open by the lighter element rim and closes behind it. The element is held back against the rear curve of the terminal by spring pressure inside the lighter, and if you rotate the lighter at this point it will wipe/scrape both contacts. When the lighter gets hot enough the B+ contact relaxes (bimetal?) and the lighter forces itself out of contact. It's a positive action; the lighter is either firmly plugged in or ejected, no gradually working its way out of contact.

Power plugs would work a lot better if they were made to emulate the actual lighter and use the designed contact, but they'd be a lot more expensive. And I doubt that the new non-lighter outlets in recent autos would support it anyway (along with most of the accessory sockets/multipliers/extenders ever made afaik - though I did have a one-into three extension wire once where one of the sockets was an actua lighter socket. The plug was no better than the usual, though).

For some reason (Old-Timer's disease?) this is making me nostalgic for the hum of the vibrator when you turned on the six-volt car radio and waited for the tubes to warm up. One of my earliest car memories. Regular radios just sat there looking dumb for a minute or two, but the car radios told you right away that something good was about to happen. And you could get to the vibrators and tubes since they wore out (vibrator was externally just an aluminum can with four pins, about like a turn signal blinker of the day. Took in DC and put out chopped AC for the radio's high-voltage circuits). Ah! and the smell of hot tubes in gear that had been used by chain-smoking soldiers or sailors. <drowns in tube nostalgia>

Yrs, d


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