thin Metal Shim for under SSC (Luxeon Replacement)

Stereodude

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Is there somewhere I can buy a proper thickness metal shim that's the size of the metal slug under a SSC so that the emitter will be at the same height as a Luxeon? :thinking:
 
Lots of places like independent hardware stores and hobby shops or onlinemetals.com carry copper sheet. You will have to cut it to size, but that's not difficult.
 
I found some brass washers at a hardware store the right size. Not quite as good as solid copper- but worked fine for me. I believe the sandwich shoppe sells them?
 
Beat the heck out of a penny until it is the required thickness and trim to size.
Norm
 
Pennies have been made out of Zinc for many years...

1982 was the change-over year. Copper pennies as well as copper plated zinc pennies were both produced in 1982.

Not that it'd matter much, copper vs zinc, for as thin as the shim would be.
 
I should have remembered the year but alas I have slept toooo many times. Zinc doesn't do real well as a heat conductor and it corrodes rather easily which is why it is used as a protective coating for other metals. A pre 82 penny would work tho...:D
 
I found some brass washers at a hardware store the right size. Not quite as good as solid copper- but worked fine for me. I believe the sandwich shoppe sells them?

The specific heats of brass and copper are nearly the same, so brass is definitely as good an option as copper.
 
That's not what I found when I ordered them. LINK

I had to sand them on both sides to get them flat and closer to spec.

-LT

I agree. Looks like they were made using a punch press. I used a 1" metal bar on a metal table to roll them, less sanding that way.
 
I agree. Looks like they were made using a punch press. I used a 1" metal bar on a metal table to roll them, less sanding that way.

Sounds like making bread. :D I need another method, last time I did a batch my finger tips got pretty chewed up.

-LT
 
The specific heats of brass and copper are nearly the same, so brass is definitely as good an option as copper.

Thermal conductivity is what is important here, not specific heat. If that were the case, the specific heat of zinc is actually higher than copper.

Thermal conductivity of brass is about 1/3 that of copper, and only about 10% better than zinc, so using a post-1982 penny is about the same as using a brass disk.
 
Hobby shops, if you have one near you, often sell K&S metal. Often they have sheet versions of copper, aluminum, and brass.
 
in a depserate move I solder-sandwiched 2 anouncement board pins' heads...hmm I do not know how they are really callled but that the ebst I can describe them...
 
You can buy a poly-pak of assorted thicknesses (or "thinnesses<g>) of brass shim-stock at a hardware store for maybe three bucks (roughly index card size sheets). This stuff is invaluable for all sorts of things (I've used it for camera repair for decades).

What I would like to know is where I can buy a small piece of thin mica. I am planning on the same upgrade (SSC for Luxeon, in Raytheon 2/AA 3W penlight), and I understand that the base of the two LEDs has different polarities and thus must be insulated from the heatsink (I would of course put heatsink grease on both sides of the mica).

I suppose I could steal the mica insulator from a TO-3 power transistor mounting kit, if such things are even sold anymore.

Does anyone have any suggestions? I know the stuff must be available from a variety of sources, and I should probably do a web search, but I think I'd fare better asking here, and getting some known-good advice, rather than wading through scads of crappy google-links and trying to find a grain of wheat in a mountain of chaff.

Ideally, I'd like a "walk-in" source that could be found in a small to medium sized town (i.e., "you need a 'z-14w Flatulofton-brand mabotonk-valve spacer disk -- the heating-supply store should have one for eleven cents"), rather than "genuine mica sheet, only $5 plus $11.42 S&H -- $25 minimum order" from an online vendor.

(All examples hypothetical; any resemblance to actual products is surreal, pathetic, and coincidental.)
 
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