Does brass provide the same electrical/electronic shielding effect as steel or aluminum, in the case of chassis construction?
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sheilding properties of brass
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Originally posted by Groover View PostDoes brass provide the same electrical/electronic shielding effect as steel or aluminum, in the case of chassis construction?
So - shielding? Yes. Exactly the same? No. Good enough for most purposes? Yes. Affordable in big quantities? No.Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
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Steel comes in two broad types for a chassis - plain carbon (typically chrome plated) and stainless steel. Most stainless steel sheet is austenitic SS. This means it's non-magnetic, and has very low permeability, so it won't be a good magnetic shield, and is roughly comparable to aluminum and brass for magnetic shielding. Plenty of amps have been produced with an aluminum chassis, so magnetic shielding is obviously not a necessary criteria for a tube amp chassis. If a magnet sticks to your chassis, it is a magnetic shield.
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Originally posted by Diablo View PostSteel comes in two broad types for a chassis - plain carbon (typically chrome plated) and stainless steel. Most stainless steel sheet is austenitic SS. This means it's non-magnetic, and has very low permeability, so it won't be a good magnetic shield, and is roughly comparable to aluminum and brass for magnetic shielding.
Plenty of amps have been produced with an aluminum chassis, so magnetic shielding is obviously not a necessary criteria for a tube amp chassis. If a magnet sticks to your chassis, it is a magnetic shield.
This is good for shunting M-fields away from sensitive stuff. But it's also good for shunting M-fields from transformers INTO sensitive stuff. It depends on the flux path the chassis sets up. Generally this is set up by the mechanical needs of the chassis. By luck, many amps are quiet anyway, but some can have hum that's impossible to get rid of without going to a non-magnetic chassis.
The devil is always in the details.Amazing!! Who would ever have guessed that someone who villified the evil rich people would begin happily accepting their millions in speaking fees!
Oh, wait! That sounds familiar, somehow.
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Weber has recently switched to stainless steel for their chassis, because they were having trouble finding a good chrome plater for the plain carbon steel chassis. The late Ted Weber did some testing comparing SS to plain-carbon steel and verified that the SS chassis didn't increase the hum. But, like RG stated, the devil's in the details, and it's doubtful that Ted hd the time to check out all of their amp designs. They make a LOT of different kits.
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