i saw a post about using copper ribbon to make coils and desided to play with the idea. being an old construction man and a collecter of (valued) junk, i had a 9" roll of 28ga. copper flashing gathering dust and ready for use. this copper has a very strong plastic coating on both sides and seems to be completely insulated and i thought it would be worth a try as copper wire for coils. it cuts easy with large sissors but it would take to lomg to cut enough strips for enough coils for a stater. so...

by setting the cutters to 1/2" i can get 18 ribbins from the width of the roll fo flashing. i could only cut 5 ribbons at the time because the fixed blades put to much drag on the drill motor that i was turning the gig with, roller cutters would be much better. even with the heavy drag of the blades the ribbons came out nice and strait.

i made a test coil using 30' of ribbon and the legs came out at 1/2". the coil weighs a little more than the 20 turns of 14ga. that i used on another project and the olms were 00.3 for the ribbon coil. hole in center is for 1x2 neos, the coil came out very tight and clean looking. i added some leads to the coil and hooked it up inline with the supply cord on my big 4" belt sander and run a 5 min. test to see if the material would carry the load and not heat up. after five min. i could not feel any diference in temp. by holding the coil in my hand. that big sander pulls a lot of amps.

next i will build the rotors so i can make some real test. all comments welcome, pepa