By Frank Ross

Unlike the usual fare of fire-breathing dragons that come off the line in prototypical high performance automotive competitions in this country, the vehicles involved in the fourth annual Formula Hybrid™ competition were looking forward to a “greener” propulsion system and that captured the imagination of the management at Storm Copper Components.

SJSU's Formula-Hybrid entry cruises the track during performance trials.

Storm Copper has a track record of commitment to the development of innovative technology but this project was set on a track of a different nature whose destination was of the same bent, so Storm was enthusiastic about sponsoring San Jose State University’s entry into the annual Formula Hybrid™ competition. This competition was the fourth annual, conducted by the prestigious Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, and held in coordination with the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE).

The Formula Hybrid competition is an educational program that serves to challenge and inspire teams of university undergraduate and graduate students to conceive their own design for hybrid-powered cars, and then to fabricate, develop and compete with other students from around the world. Students are required to work across disciplinary boundaries, such as electrical and mechanical engineering, and also to enlist the support of grants, awards and corporate sponsorships.

Although 100 pages of rules determined the outcome, teams are allowed great freedom and flexibility in the design of these vehicles, with the most significant requirement being a mandatory mechanical/electrical hybrid drive train. The concept given to students is to design and build a prototype vehicle that is to be ultimately produced for the consumer, so styling, acceleration, braking and handling performance are all factors that weigh heavily in the judging process.

SJSU's team poses for a group photo at the track in New Hampshire.

As the eleven student team members benefit from the experience, the underlying ambition of this program is to further the goal of developing a viable alternative to carbon based transportation. John Monson, Team Leader, sees the competition as an opportunity to demonstration to automotive consumers that hybrids are capable of high performance acceleration and handling characteristics that exceed the expectations of economical forms of transportation typical of the hybrid concept vehicle.

The 2010 SJSU entry was originally a gas-electric hybrid, but in the final weeks before the competition a booster exploded so they entered the full-electric powered division. That’s where Storm’s contribution to the program became a critical component.

Copper sheeting was used for battery busbars to connect the 140 lithium iron phosphate batteries that supplied power to the experimental car’s propulsion system.

According to the project’s electrical technical advisor, Matthew Kihlthau, the .24″ x 48″ copper sheet that Storm Copper contributed to the project was used to fabricate the copper bus bar for fuses that provided the required electrical safety element for the competition, the copper sheeting also served as the battery bus plate used as the main connector for the 140 lithium iron phosphate batteries that supplied power to the experimental car’s propulsion system. The car’s electrical propulsion system, which enabled a top speed of 60 mph, with a capacity of 90 minutes or roughly 20 miles, produced 200 amps of continuous power, with a peak rating of 230 amps at 102.2 volts.

For this 4th annual competition – and SJSU’s first Formula-Hybrid challenge – the judging began in May at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway, where 30 teams from five countries presented their vehicles for a complicated mechanical inspection. Following the inspection, students made a presentation to industry experts from Toyota, Chrysler and other auto companies, touting the costs, design and marketing strengths of their vehicle. Once the inspections and presentations were completed, the racing began. Unlike typical auto races, where the checkered flag goes to the car that crosses the finish line first, this competition selects a winner based on the way the car is designed, built and most importantly the measured performance of drive train innovation and fuel efficiency.

Copper bus bar was used for fuses that provided the required electrical safety element for the competition.

San Jose State University’s team finished second in the Hybrid in Progress category, behind a collective effort fielded by Florida A&M/Florida State University. More importantly, the road to a more environmentally friendly form of automotive transportation in the future was advanced through the process of education, innovation, experimentation and the classic application of American ingenuity. Such are the things of the future, and Storm Copper’s commitment to alternative energy and innovation that will secure our nation’s future for both commerce and individual consumers.

For more information on the San Jose State University Formula-Hybrid project, check out the SJSU project Web site.

Here’s a competition summary video that illustrates the SJSU effort well.

If you have modular batteries in need of copper posts, plates or other connectors, non-plated or plated in bright tin, lead, lead-tin or other plating conducted entirely in-house, consider Storm Copper Components.

By Frank Ross

Static electricity is an ever-present danger.

Anyone who has ever slid across a car seat in wintertime and received a jolt of static electricity knows the importance of static grounding, even if they don’t practice it often. Workers whose jobs are performed in an environment where such a spark can create a deadly explosion do not have the luxury of ignoring this dangerous potential. Some high-risk operations are obvious, while others are not commonly considered volatile.

You may have noticed that when a gas tanker fills up an underground storage tank at your local convenience store, the driver always attaches a metal grounding cable before beginning his work. Although gasoline is an obvious liquid with significant risk of explosion, other more common items in our daily lives are equally dangerous under the right conditions. For example, given the right mixture of oxygen and air-borne particulates, even common flour can create a highly explosive atmosphere.

While flour explosions are a much larger risk in areas where large amounts of flour are handled such as mills or bakeries and large grain elevators where grain dust is common, it only takes a little flour to create an explosion. Once formed, a highly dispersed dust cloud of approximately two ounces of flour suspended in a cubic yard of air has tremendous explosive properties. If exposed to a spark or flame the flour dust particles will burn and if the dust cloud is large enough, a flash fire can create a serious explosion. In areas where dust clouds are common, static grounding is a mandatory safety precaution.

Retract-A-Cable (RAC) is coiled corrosion-resistant orange vinyl-coated cable that makes it easy to ground everything from drums to vehicles using the REB2960 or another of the series of Static Grounding Clamps sold by Storm Copper.

The data processing industry, as well as the facilities where semiconductors are manufactured is considered a hazardous location that requires a diligent static grounding system. Likewise, the information technology (IT) world has a primary concern in minimizing static electricity and circulating currents because of the need to protect sensitive electronic equipment from events that lead to equipment failure and data losses.

In hazardous locations such as chemical plants, grounding and bonding circuits are extremely important for safety of personnel as well as protecting the physical plant. When the potential for multiple sources of ignition are a primary concern in explosive atmospheres, a more enhanced protection system of handling static electricity is a common safety solution. Electrical engineering designs in these types of installations typically incorporate a system of static electricity protection.

All matter, whether liquid or solid, is made up of atoms. Atoms are either positively charged protons or neutrons with no charge. Together they form the nucleus or core of the atom while negatively charged electrons surround the nucleus. In their normal state, atoms are considered to be electrically neutral. Basically this means there are equal amounts of positive and negatively charge atoms present. Atoms can become “charged” when an excess, or a deficiency, of electrons is created relative to their naturally neutral state. Sparks from charged conductors that are ungrounded (including the human body) are responsible for most explosions and fires ignited by static electricity. Sparks are typically intense capacitive discharges that occur in the gap between two charged conducting bodies and the potential for an explosion or fire is directly related to the amount of energy contained in the discharge. A capacitor is basically two conductors separated by an insulating material. In the electrical phenomena known as a static discharge, the charge potential is generally separated by a resistive barrier such as an air gap or form of insulation between the conductors.

According to the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), defines Static Electricity as an electric charge that is significant only for the effects of its electrical field component and that manifests no significant magnetic field component. And a Static Electric Discharge is the release of static electricity in the form of a spark, corona discharge, brush discharge, or propagating brush discharge that might be capable of causing ignition under appropriate circumstances. The NFPA notes the following conditions must be met to create the potential for an explosive static discharge.

1. An effective means of separating the charge must be present.
2. A means of accumulating the separated charges and maintaining a difference of electrical potential must be available.
3. A discharge of the static electricity of adequate energy must occur.
4. The discharge must occur in an ignitable mixture [NFPA 77 – 4.3.1].

Storm’s Personnel Grounding Clamp has an adjustable wrist strap with silver impregnated nylon knitted on inside for superior conductivity.

The primary objective when addressing concerns and hazards of static electricity and stray voltages is to minimize, or hopefully eliminate, any differences of potential between electrically conductive objects and the ground. Grounding and bonding are two of the methods most often used to reduce the risk of static discharges.

The NFPA defines grounding as being connected to earth or to some conducting body that serves in place of the earth. By their definition, bonding is the permanent joining of metallic parts to form an electrically conductive path that ensures electrical continuity and the capacity to conduct safely any current likely to be imposed. The bonding process consists of connecting two or more conductive objects together by means of a conductor so they have the same electrical potential, but not necessarily at the same potential as the earth.

To eliminate confusion between these two terms, think of grounding as a connection or path to the earth to put electrically conductive materials at the same potential as the earth. Bonding is a physical connection of electrically conductive materials to eliminate differences in the potential between each individually, thereby forming one conductive mass.

Humidity is another factor in the equation that determines the potential for explosion from a static discharge. Generally speaking, when higher humidity is present the potential for an explosion is reduced. Other options for reducing ignition hazards from static electricity would include removing the ignitable mixture from the area where static electricity could cause a discharge capable of igniting the existing mixture. Another consideration would be reducing the generation or accumulation of a charge by means of process or product modifications. And the final option would be neutralizing the charges. To that end, grounding isolated conductors and ionizing the air are the two primary methods of neutralizing charges.

This information is not totally exhaustive about the causes or potential solutions for static discharges, but is intended to increase your awareness of the potential danger that exists. The analysis of risk and any potential solution for any situation should be evaluated by an engineering professional with expertise in this particular discipline. Once a solution has been determined, StormCopper.com has all the static grounding equipment necessary to keep your specific static electric hazards under control.

Shop online in our secure Web site, or for static-free service, give our friendly customer service staff a call on our toll-free line: 1-888-334-2177.

When Dave Ryder isn’t hammering out hot licks on his guitar, backed up by the Dave Ryder band, he’s thinking up ways to improve upon the pleasures in his Missouri lifestyle. A desire to have warmer water in the family pool was the inspiration for a composition in copper, wood and glass that Dave maintains the average homeowner can make on their own – perhaps with a few borrowed tools.

A piece of donated glass (76” x 46”) dictated the size of his solar collector, and he decided to make the frame out of pressure treated 2×4s and 3/4″ plywood. To augment the basic copper tubing assembly, he ordered a roll of copper to reflect and magnify the heat on the tubing. “I ordered a 10′ x 20″ roll of heavy copper flashing .0216 (standard heavy weight for larger craft work, roofing and range hoods etc.) from Storm Copper Components – they are great, lowest price I could find and when I unrolled it it was almost 6″ longer than 10′. I cut it in half and laid the two sheets under the copper manifold I made from 1/2″ copper tubing I got from Lowes (the total copper cost in this project was around $250.00,” he said.

Next he soldered the tubing to the flashing and secured it with metal strapping, painted it and mounted the frame next to his pool. After a few plumbing connections, Dave was happily pumping solar heated water into his pool. For more photos and the rest of the story, or to listen to about 50+ songs on his web site, go to http://daveryder.com/do-it-yourself-solar-swimming-pool-heater. Once you’ve checked out the ingenious solar heater, tune into a few of Dave’s songs. They’re not solar heated, but they’re hot to go!

Storm Copper's circle shear slowly turns out another perfect copper circle.

Storm Copper's circle shear slowly turns out another perfect copper circle.

No matter what size, shape or physical profile of copper cut you may need, Storm Copper Components can make it happen fast and to exact specifications. This capability now includes a circle shear machine that produces perfect copper circles and rings.

Copper circles are commonly used for a variety of crafts and metal art, including metal spinning of ferrules, bowls, cups or most anything round. Copper circles are also used as fence post caps, heat diffuser plates, pipe-end caps and as round plates used in tube heat exchangers.

For fast-order response for these common uses, Storm stocks a wide range of copper circles from 3-1/2” to 35” in diameter, cut from copper sheet from .002” (20 gauge) to .125” (8 gauge) thick.

For OEM’s, Storm produces made-to-order copper circles that can be used as spacers, or essentially large washers or ring gaskets for high-end Ultra High Vacuum (UHV), where extreme vacuum systems require special seals and gaskets used between components to prevent even trace leakage.

Other industrial uses for copper gaskets include heat exchangers, compressors, condensers, pumps, valves, and general industrial applications in all sizes & shapes.
According to plant industrial engineer, Steve Crumley, “Storm’s circle shear works like a giant can opener, slowly turning a piece of square copper sheet while heavy pressure is applied to the round cutting wheel. For thicker copper sheet, several revolutions may be required to insure a precise, even cut.”

Crumley adds, “by cutting a 35” circle, then readjusting the Circle Shear to cut a 33” circle from the original, you end up with a 35” ring, or washer up to 1/8” in thickness, and that’s a pretty serious washer!”

It’s important to understand how cutting made-to-order circles or ring gaskets is only the final part of a production process based on a set of specifications put forth by the customer and by Storm’s quality engineering team. For example, copper gaskets used in UHV have to meet pre-set vacuum ratings as well as temperature ranges. Gaskets or seals can be produced for single or multiple uses, with precise inner and outer diameters.

The circle shear machine is just one part of the overall capability Storm Copper maintains to provide custom cutting, shaping, punching, milling and plating of copper to meet the most diverse customer requirements and production schedules.

When you need copper, call the experts at Storm Copper Components. They’ll give you a great price on copper circles, without giving you the run around!

Copper comes in many forms and thicknesses. Copper sheet is thick, ridged and can be difficult to bend and cut by hand, but it is strong and durable. Copper flashing is flexible and has a soft temper which means it can be more easily formed and cut by hand. Although used primarily in roofing applications, copper flashing has many craft and decorating uses. Copper foil is the thinnest and most flexible copper sheeting available. We also stock a good selection of aluminum and stainless crafting foils. The flexibility and durability varies with the specific thickness of the foil used.

Selecting the right thickness and flexibility of copper foil or copper sheeting for an art project is not difficult once you have some comparative information to go by. Listed below is a brief explanation of some of the cutting and forming characteristics of copper foil and copper sheeting to consider when determining the correct thickness of material for your requirements.

.001″ copper foil - Can tear with fingers, cuts perfectly with normal scissors, really feels like aluminum foil that you would find in your kitchen cabinet.

.003″ copper foil – Can not tear with fingers, cuts perfectly with normal scissors, easily shaped by hand.

.005″ copper foil - Cuts perfectly with normal scissors, shaped easily by hand, retains shape but still fairly flimsy.

.010″ copper foil - Can still be cut with scissors, shaped easily by hand, can make 90 degree bends by hand, retains shape well.

.0216″ copper coil - Need metal snips to cut, can be bent by hand, 90 degree bends by hand are difficult.

If you’re still not sure what thickness you need? Just give us a call at 1-888-334-2177 and we will be glad to help you out.

According to national insurance data, lightning causes more than $5 billion in damage each year in the US alone. When a lightning strike is experienced in a home or office building, transferred voltage potentials can develop between multiple ground references that are not intentionally or effectively bonded together.

Most often it is the electronics within a home, such as personal computers, Internet modems, stereo or home theater systems and televisions that are most susceptible to damage when systems are not interconnected. The lack of a proper bonded connection between systems such as electrical and telephone wiring have caused or contributed to appliance and equipment damage, ignited fires and caused personal injury.

Proper bonding between connections and electric power systems will minimize the voltage differences and reduce the potential for damage caused by transients. A home that is properly bonded has an increased level of safety for people inside during a lightning storm. Intersystem bonding provides a low-impedance connection for grounding separate systems and creating an equipotential plane.

For more than 15 years the National Electrical Code (NEC) has specified that ground conductors from various systems be bonded together, but they failed to specify exactly how that was to be done. Then, in 2008 the telecommunications industry submitted and won approval for the intersystem bonding termination requirement. Their intent was to create a dedicated location for terminating grounding conductors from communications circuits and other systems. In Article 250.94 three acceptable methods for bonding systems in a building are identified. The first option is a set of terminals mounted and electrically connected to the meter enclosure. The second alternative is a bonding or grounding busbar near the service enclosure, meter enclosure or raceway for service conductors. And the third alternative is a bonding bar near the electrode conductor.

Since this change was announced, many states have recognized the advantages of Article 250.94 and adopted them into local codes, but have not been proactive in updating existing homes or businesses. A simple solution is available; the Intersystem Bonding Termination (IBTB). This device is an easily installed method for meeting this effective code and all mounting hardware and anchors are included.

The IBTB is designed to meet the requirements of the 2008 NEC® Article 250.94 section titled “Bonding for Other Systems.” The IBTB is mounted adjacent to the meter base or service entrance equipment and is a convenient way to interconnect and terminate grounding conductors from telephone, CATV or radio and television antennas.
The IBTB includes corrosion-resistant, stainless steel mounting hardware and is easily accessible for connection and inspection. The lay-in connection clamp (#6 – #2 AWG, or 16 – 35 mm2) allows easy installation of the grounding electrode conductor in one continuous length, where possible. The polymeric base and housing is impact-resistant, UV-stabilized and meets UL® requirements for weatherability performance. Accommodates (5) 14-4 AWG (1.5 – 25 mm2 bonding conductors and (1) 6 – 2 AWG (16 – 35 mm2) grounding electrode conductor.

When mounted near the meter base or service entrance equipment it is easily accessed for initial connections and subsequent inspection. It is ideal for protecting cable TV, telephone, satellite systems, security systems, sprinkler system controls, pet fencing, landscape lighting, structural lightning protection and more.

For installation, when the grounding electrode connector is accessible, the integral lay-in connection clamp permits the direct connection of the grounding electrode conductor to the Intersystem Bonding Termination. If this is not possible, a #6 AWG conductor can be used to connect the IBTB to the grounding electrode using a listed grounding connector. When the grounding electrode is not accessible, a minimum #6 AWG conductor can be used to bond to the meter enclosure or metallic raceway with a listed device.

The entire installation process shouldn’t take more than a half hour to an hour at the most, and once completed you’ll feel much more comfortable when lightning and thunder roll through your neighborhood again.

For all your grounding and electrical component needs, contact the knowledgeable and helpful customer service team at Storm Copper. Call toll free: 1-866-716-9773 or log onto http://www.stormcopper.com/ to peruse products or place an order.

Sales Manager Charlene Miller and Storm’s OEM Sales representative Joe Radecki are ready to greet customers at the NATE show, held at Disney’s Coronado Convention Center.

Storm Copper Components’ owners and several sales and marketing representatives attended the National Association of Tower Erectors (NATE) trade show in Orlando, and as far as the staff were concerned, NATE was great!

Traffic to the Storm booth was very strong as attendees discovered they could get a free copper peace sign by stopping by the Storm Copper booth. They were also very enthusiastic about the discount card they received for dropping their business card in the distinctive copper box, made by Storm’s creative shop.

Storm President, Carol Howard and Sales Manager Charlene Miller rated the show a great success based on the feedback they received from talking to many prospective customers. “This was our second year attending NATE. We met a lot of new potential customers and got reacquainted with many existing customers that came by to see what we are doing that’s new,” Miller said.

The hole pattern on Storm's busbars make it easy to position connections at a 45-degree angle.

“We don’t often get feedback from those who are on the front line, installing the components Storm builds, so it was very enlightening to hear what Jeremy Buckles had to say about our busbars,” said Dan Kitts, Storm’s co-owner.

Buckles and a co-worker stopped by after giving his presentation to say how much he liked Storm’s busbars because the hole pattern makes it very simple to comply with specifications of some of the more rigid cell phone companies. According to Buckles, Risk Management Supervisor for Com-Tec, sometimes busbars have to be mounted vertically, and the code requires a 45-degree connection. With the hole pattern on Storm’s busbars the connections line up perfectly and are simple to install due to the generous size and spacing.

The large copper peace sign hanging in the booth was a real traffic stopper, as people who recalled the symbol from the 60’s stopped by to pick up one as a memento. One man asked with a smile, “Will this get me in to Woodstock?”

NATE is an annual event designed to educate industry professionals, update attendees on safety concerns and give the various companies involved in supplying products a chance to display their products and services. While the show moves around the country, attendance this year could have been strong due to the Disney resort location. It gave everyone a chance to take care of business, and spend a little time in the Magic Kingdom. While the weather was a little cooler than normal for February in Florida, Storm staff members enjoyed the work and play before heading back to Tennessee.

Known for streamlined fabrication of copper electrical connectors, Storm Copper Components reminds OEM’s and systems installers to take advantage of another of its cost-saving production capabilities: tin, silver, nickel and lead plating, done in-house at Storm’s east Tennessee production facility.

All too often electrical parts manufacturers have to send out copper connectors to outside vendors for plating or coating, a lengthy process that requires excess packaging, additional freight costs, lost time and risks that commonly occur in shipping. When the plated copper components are returned for testing before delivery, even the slightest scratch in the plated surface can lead to rejection and delays to the customer.

Storm’s electroplating options for copper electrical connectors include bright tin plating, matte tin, nickel, silver, various tin/lead alloys and pure lead. Storm Copper offers this diverse offering of plating options to meet the many varied requirements dictated by a wide variety of industry applications.

For example, tin is a common plating metal most often specified applications like power sub-stations, tower grounding, and high-voltage connections. Tin plating is fairly inexpensive, protects copper from outside environmental degradation that damages connections, masks copper from thieves by destroying its value to recyclers.

Storm’s electroplating process incorporates an electrolyte bath where electrical connectors such as copper bus bars are fully immersed to produce a uniform coating over edges and the rounded surfaces of bus bar holes and bends. For better-quality, Storm uses a trace amount of lead in its tin plating process to prevent the occurrence of tiny crystalline structures called “whiskers” than are electrically conductive and can be broken off during installation, increasing the potential of electrical hazards.

Silver plating is popular in the switchgear industry because it is very good on surface-to-surface conductivity. Because of its high cost, silver is generally limited to application on contact points where two components are joined together.

In applications where lead-acid or wet cell batteries are used, caustic materials or vapors can degrade electrical battery connectors, lead is the preferred plating because it is impervious to sulfuric acid.

No matter what environment or application, Storm offers a clear edge to OEM’s and systems installers through its cost- and time-saving capability to plate tin, silver, nickel and lead in house.

Storm Copper Components is committed to meeting its customer’s requirements by providing innovative, cost-effective solutions and by focusing on continual improvement of all our products, processes, and services. For 20 years, the company has specialized in the manufacture of custom electrical connectors for the wireless, telecommunications, power and alternative energy markets, serving OEM’s, electrical contractors and system installers.

For more information, or to schedule an interview with Dan Kitts, please call Dave Krikorian at 1-800-334-2177 or email dkrikorian@stormcopper.com.

Decatur, Tennessee (February 12, 2010) – Storm Copper Components, a leading manufacturer of copper electrical connectors in North America, attributes much of its recent growth to a concept called “Value Engineering,” a method of cost-efficient production forged by raw material and component shortages in World War II. With a constant eye on quality improvement, Storm’s systematic approach to value engineering has streamlined the process of fabricating copper electrical components, and reduced the overall costs of high end connectors such as bus bar.

Storm’s value engineering process is focused on keeping costs in check by stocking copper bar or copper sheeting that most closely matches design specifications. Storm Copper co-owner, Dan Kitts, points out a critical factor; “Many OEMs round up in size when purchasing copper busbar, but often the next standard size is more than is required, increasing the cost unnecessarily. Although it may sound obvious, the number one factor in keeping busbar pricing low is often overlooked: only use as much copper metal as is necessary for the required ampacity.”

“Recently Storm Copper surpassed the threshold of 300 unique profiles of copper bar and copper sheet, which means in most cases we have exact size of copper metal required for an order already sitting on a shelf,” Kitts said. Also among the one million pounds of copper metal inventory Storm maintains is an extensive selection of metric copper. Storm Copper has amassed the largest inventory of metric sized copper bar stock in North America, to pass on its cost-efficient value engineering to OEMs in Europe, Canada and other parts of the world.

Another way to control costs and lead-time through value engineering is using an off the shelf bus-bar thicknesses. An OEM’s desire for optimal thickness should not require a special mill run to produce the required size of copper metal bus bar. By utilizing readily available busbar thicknesses, Storm is able to provide quick lead times and avoid the costs of producing a unique busbar profile from the copper mill.

Other key cost-saving value engineering factors stem from punching vs. milling holes. Telling a customer when a hole’s location is too close to a formed or bent area of the bus bar where a punched hole can be deformed, or recommending a copper bus bar design with a wider hole tolerance; these are cost-effective ways to save the expense of milling.

Storm Copper Components is committed to meeting its customer’s requirements by providing innovative, cost-effective solutions and by focusing on continual improvement of all our products, processes, and services. For 20 years, the company has specialized in the manufacture of custom electrical connectors for the wireless, telecommunications, power and alternative energy markets, serving OEM’s, electrical contractors and system installers.

For more information, or to schedule an interview with co-owner Dan Kitts, please call Dave Krikorian at 1-800-334-2177 or email dkrikorian@stormcopper.com.

Storm Copper Components, a leading manufacturer of copper electrical connectors, is pleased to announce the creation of yet another product guide designed to assist OEMs, electrical engineers and system installers at solving operational and design issues. A Guide to Flexible Electric Connectors is now available free as a one-click download in PDF format at the Storm Copper website.

In straightforward terms, A Guide to Flexible Electric Connectors explains how flexible electrical connectors, also called flex braid or flexible jumpers, can solve high-voltage connectivity problems created by vibration from generators, turbines and transformers. In addition to the causes and effects of vibration, the guide simplifies the process of selecting the proper flexible copper electrical connector by offering flex braid specifications and helpful purchasing tips.

After working with electrical engineers for many years, Storm Copper has learned the ins and outs of the copper flex braid selection process. This experience has led Storm to understand that most engineers know how flexible connectors solve the problem of vibration, yet many remain challenged by factors relevant to selecting the best flex-braid connector for a specific application. These factors include physical design features such as connector hole patterns, length, ampacity, strand patterns of copper flex braids and the subtle difference between flat and round copper braid.

One of several product guides from Storm Copper, this new guide to flexible braided connectors discusses all of the considerations required for copper flex braid selection, including a brief explanation of the manufacturing process that provides insight into Storm Copper’s quality engineering. Information about the advantages of tin-plating is also included along with the issue of matching metals to prevent galvanic corrosion.

A handy specifications chart – provided on the last page of the guide – works as a key to simplify copper flex braid selection by displaying significant variables in a spreadsheet format, where comparison of capacity and other characteristics is much easier to visualize.

To access the free PDF download of the product guide, visit the Storm Copper Components website landing page for Flexible Electrical Connectors. The link also appears on this month’s (February) issues of the PQ Newsbeat electronic newsletter.

Storm Copper Components is committed to meeting its customer’s requirements by providing innovative, cost-effective solutions and by focusing on continual improvement of all our products, processes, and services. For 20 years, the company has specialized in the manufacture of custom electrical connectors for the wireless, telecommunications, power and alternative energy markets, serving OEM’s, electrical contractors and system installers.

Click this link for your free download of A Guide to Flexible Electric Connectors.
For more information, or to schedule an interview with co-owner Dan Kitts, please call Dave Krikorian at 1-800-334-2177 or email dkrikorian@stormcopper.com.

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