Oxidized Socket; General; Figure - FLIR E Series User Manual

For use with flir e40bx, borrowed from ccf
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23
Application examples

23.3 Oxidized socket

23.3.1 General

Depending on the type of socket and the environment in which the socket is installed, ox-
ides may occur on the socket's contact surfaces. These oxides can lead to locally in-
creased resistance when the socket is loaded, which can be seen in an infrared image
as local temperature increase.
Note
A socket's construction may differ dramatically from one manufacturer to another. For this reason, dif-
ferent faults in a socket can lead to the same typical appearance in an infrared image.
Local temperature increase can also result from improper contact between a wire and socket, or from
difference in load.

23.3.2 Figure

The image below shows a series of fuses where one fuse has a raised temperature on
the contact surfaces against the fuse holder. Because of the fuse holder's blank metal,
the temperature increase is not visible there, while it is visible on the fuse's ceramic
material.
#T559845; r. AA/ 8324/8526; en-US
48

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