Pure nickel vs. plated

rg12

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Hey Guys,

I know that pure nickel is about 10 times more conductive than nickel plated steel.

In real life, does 1 piece of pure nickel can really perform the same as 10 pieces of nickel plated steel?

Also, does the nickel plating add a measurable conductive difference?
 
IACS has a chart showing the electrical conductivity of various materials, with pure copper being rated as 100.

The chart below shows cast steel at 10/100, and pure nickel at 25/100

http://eddy-current.com/conductivity-of-metals-sorted-by-resistivity/

Then, this website lists nickel at 22/100, with steel being at 5-15/100 (depending on the type)

https://www.bluesea.com/resources/108/Electrical_Conductivity_of_Materials

As a side-note, I read somewhere that nickel-plated copper (which I like right now) runs about 80/100, but it didn't state how thick the plating was...
 
Rust is not conductive. Since plated strips tend to oxidize, the performance of pure nickel is absolutely better over time.
 
That's stainless steel. You sure ain't getting that as a cheap nickel alternative!
Try the Carbon steel at 5.9 a bit less than 1/2 of the nickel rating. Which seems about right.
 
From Damian Rene
 

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I believe nickel plated steel has about 40% higher resistance than pure nickel. But the plating of the nickel can vary between suppliers so thats just a general ballpark estimate.

For short strips of say 0.15mm * 8mm, I have no problem running these at 10A+. Wire is often rated at 60C, 75C, 90C and even 105C for wire that is in appliances. I don't know why we would rate pure nickel any differently from standard copper wire?

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So I guess it's about twice as conductive then...it's weird that one website shows one thing and the other shows a totally different story...
Thanks guys :)
 
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