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Old December 19th 04, 10:30 PM
William R. Watt
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It's better to use "dielectric heat transfer grease".
Compare the specs to the "dielectric grease". Not the same.
The technician at Blue Streak looked at the specs on the website of the
stuff I used and said it was good but Blue Streak recommends a grease of
their own. The stuff sold at the auto parts store for spark plugs is not
the same stuff.

MisterSkippy ) writes:
> The silicone dielectric grease is what you were looking for. BTDT.
> I used it under a new ignition module in my car as a heat insulator as
> per the FSM. Also use it on plug wires at both ends to keep out
> moisture and prevent arcing.
> FWIW
> YMMV
> DFB
>
> On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 22:03:04 GMT, "Ropert's Aloha"
> > wrote:
>
>>
>>> Just making su
>>> Did you put heatsink compound on the device? (Radio Shack sells it) It
>>> is supposed to have that stuff between the device and its mounting
>>> plate. If you didn't do that, I'd suggest you redo it because it might
>>> cause problems for you a while from now.

>>
>>
>>No, Ididn't use any. None even came with the igniter I bought at Napa. I
>>went to Radio Shack out here in Hawaii and the kid in the store looked like
>>he had never heard of it. I searched the store and found nothing. Then I
>>went to Napa and the only thing close was a Silicone Dielectric by Permatex
>>for Ford and GM to protect from moisture. It didn't really mention
>>protection from heat. I almost went for it, but thought maybe Comp USA would
>>have something like it. I even went to Ace Hardware and they had nothing. So
>>do you put the grease in between the little mounting plate that is bolted
>>onto the inside of the distributor? And how much? There was a very tiny thin
>>coat of a type of clear grease on it when I took it out, but didn't seem
>>like it was between the mounting plate and igniter unit, but myabe it really
>>was.
>>
>>thanks for the heads up
>>
>>Gary
>>Hawaii
>>

>
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>
> "When a legislature undertakes to proscribe the exercise of a citizen's
> constitutional rights it acts lawlessly and the citizen can take matters into
> his own hands and proceed on the basis that such a law is no law at all."
> - Justice William O. Douglas



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