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| INFO: Trad Archery for Bowhunters |

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RIGHT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS
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Quote from: willi on November 29, 2025, 04:44:57 PMQuote from: Cupcake on November 11, 2025, 04:26:58 PMIn order to get a higher voltage to work for the heat strip a higher resistivity material needs to be used. The most prevalent materials in SS all have about 9 x 10-8 ohms per m2/m. If we wanted to use 12 volts to run the heat strips the material would have to be about 6x higher in resistivity.why not calculate and adjust the width of strip that will let the battery charger (without the voltage controller) work at 10 amps ?
I calculate about 0.2 ohms resistance for the SS from Kirk's data. If you run 12 volts through this strip it would dissipate 7200 watts and require 600 amps.
To get 120 watts at 12 volts requires 1.2 ohms. One could place 0.5 ohms resistors at each end that bolt to the strip and their temperature would be put into the strip, albeit at the ends, so it is not likely to heat evenly down the strip.
Nichrome has more than 10x the resistivity of the SS so that is why it works so well.
Now that I have spent a bit more time on this problem and did a bit of math and see that we need a higher resistance material I conclude that with SS strips you need very high current and low voltage. To use a higher voltage and lower current requires a higher resistance. V = I x R
(assuming the charger has enough duty cycle % at 10 amps for the length of the job)
Quote from: Maclean on September 18, 2025, 07:37:39 AMI'm a big fan of the American Leathers Big Shot glove. Good finger protection while giving great string feel and a super clean release.
Quote from: durp on November 29, 2025, 03:40:20 PMThe one that flies the bestRight on! Personally I just start with the arrow I want to shoot and try and build up from there. 11-12 grains per pound as the goal. Example my long bow I shoot a .204 ID arrow that has 6.7 gpi. 80 grain inserts and 150 grain BH gets to 460 +/- grain total. Never bothered figuring foc. I was looking for lighter faster and these fly like lasers.
Quote from: Cupcake on November 11, 2025, 04:26:58 PMIn order to get a higher voltage to work for the heat strip a higher resistivity material needs to be used. The most prevalent materials in SS all have about 9 x 10-8 ohms per m2/m. If we wanted to use 12 volts to run the heat strips the material would have to be about 6x higher in resistivity.why not calculate and adjust the width of strip that will let the battery charger (without the voltage controller) work at 10 amps ?
I calculate about 0.2 ohms resistance for the SS from Kirk's data. If you run 12 volts through this strip it would dissipate 7200 watts and require 600 amps.
To get 120 watts at 12 volts requires 1.2 ohms. One could place 0.5 ohms resistors at each end that bolt to the strip and their temperature would be put into the strip, albeit at the ends, so it is not likely to heat evenly down the strip.
Nichrome has more than 10x the resistivity of the SS so that is why it works so well.
Now that I have spent a bit more time on this problem and did a bit of math and see that we need a higher resistance material I conclude that with SS strips you need very high current and low voltage. To use a higher voltage and lower current requires a higher resistance. V = I x R
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