I'm going to add some fuel to this fire.  I built a screen room in the 
garage of my old home in Huntsville, Alabama and kept it for two years, over
which time its performance did not noticeably degrade.  The screen material
was trade-named Britecoat aluminum, or something close to that, which I
bought retail at a home improvement center.  It was window screen material
made of aluminum with some kind of treatment to keep it from turning grey in
the weather.  I bought four foot wide rolls, and where one roll came up
against another I overlapped them and turned them over each other, a couple
times, then I pounded roofing nails through the wrap into the 2x4 frame to
squeeze the wrap.  I used no other treatment.

Incidentally, Huntsville has a very humid climate, but no salt air.  My
screen room was protected from direct weather, but exposed year round to
heat and cold and humidity.


>From: John Woodgate <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: Re: Maintaining conductivity of freshly machined aluminum
>Date: Thu, Feb 6, 2003, 5:20 PM
>

>
> I read in !emc-pstc that Barker, Neil <[email protected]>
> wrote (in <[email protected]>) about
> 'Maintaining conductivity of freshly machined aluminum' on Thu, 6 Feb
> 2003:
>>Aluminium oxidises extremely rapidly in normal atmospheric conditions.
>
> Indeed. See what happens when mercury removes the oxide film.
>
>>You really cannot rely on untreated aluminium to aluminium interfaces
>>unless they are closely mated immediately
>
> The oxide film forms in milliseconds. You would have to be VERY quick.
>
>>after machining or abrasive
>>cleaning and are subsequently protected from the atmosphere.
>
> If that were entirely true, aluminium exposed to air would appear to be
> a non-conductor, and it doesn't. The oxide film is only about 1 molecule
> thick, and the measured conductivity with it present is little different
> from that of aluminium machined in a vacuum or under argon.
>
> I'd like to see some results of conductivity testing two blocks bolted
> together with no surface treatment and two similar blocks bolted
> together with the surface treatment of your choice. The only stipulation
> is that the atmosphere is not abnormally corrosive.
> --
> Regards, John Woodgate, OOO - Own Opinions Only. http://www.jmwa.demon.co.uk
> Interested in professional sound reinforcement and distribution? Then go to
> http://www.isce.org.uk
> PLEASE do NOT copy news posts to me by E-MAIL!
>
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