Hello Al,
Thank you for your honest questions.
When you are looking at a brittle insulation inside of a component, it is the result of YEARS of heat. Often this is caused by internal components in an old radio, such as the tubes, and has nothing to do with the viability of the original wire.
I have seen MANY modern UL listed extension cords fall prey to the same "symptom" from years of the wire heating due to excessive current draw and modern internal wiring due to a similar chassis heat.
I can not speak for ANY wire aside from the wire I use.
It is QUITE supple, flexible, and in what I would consider "like new" condition.
I have some of this same wire that has been used in audio power cords for over 10 years that is still supple, flexible, and shows no signs of wear or aging.
I recommend that any person purchasing cords, cables, or raw wire only deal with a trusted professional so as to minimize the possibility of purchasing improperly stored, aged, or rotted NOS wire.
As for Simple Q, he may be knowlegable, but it was quite obvious he was looking for a fight if you read his comments in context.
Also, in the case of a power cord having a short, it is ONLY possible that it would create a lower resistance path.
It would create a zero load situation, at least for an instant, until either it blew the breaker or melted the shorting strand.
There is NO POSSIBLITY of a higher resistance situation.
Thank you for your honest questions.
When you are looking at a brittle insulation inside of a component, it is the result of YEARS of heat. Often this is caused by internal components in an old radio, such as the tubes, and has nothing to do with the viability of the original wire.
I have seen MANY modern UL listed extension cords fall prey to the same "symptom" from years of the wire heating due to excessive current draw and modern internal wiring due to a similar chassis heat.
I can not speak for ANY wire aside from the wire I use.
It is QUITE supple, flexible, and in what I would consider "like new" condition.
I have some of this same wire that has been used in audio power cords for over 10 years that is still supple, flexible, and shows no signs of wear or aging.
I recommend that any person purchasing cords, cables, or raw wire only deal with a trusted professional so as to minimize the possibility of purchasing improperly stored, aged, or rotted NOS wire.
As for Simple Q, he may be knowlegable, but it was quite obvious he was looking for a fight if you read his comments in context.
Also, in the case of a power cord having a short, it is ONLY possible that it would create a lower resistance path.
It would create a zero load situation, at least for an instant, until either it blew the breaker or melted the shorting strand.
There is NO POSSIBLITY of a higher resistance situation.