I am using a potentiometer (not a rectifier)to control the current and my battery pack is made up of 10 AA nicads that have plenty of power
tried another set of nicads that had 3.7 volts but even that is too little according to your setup
However, if your potentiometer setting is high, you'll be burning up too much power w/in the pot, it will incur a high voltage drop, so voltage at the anode/cathode might be low.
Don't measure voltage at the batteries. Measure voltage at the tank, across the anode/cathode. If it's less than 0.4v, then you're losing too much across the potentiometer, and you'll nee to raise the battery pack voltage.
If you check the "Sitcky" thread: ATTENTION SUCCESSFUL PLATERS - YOUR DATA NEEDED, I've posted some of my actual plating data:
I have been heating the solution to the recommended 110 degrees but your setup was at 65 degrees.
I haven't been using an acid pickle because I didn't think I needed to
A mild sulphuric acid dip (1-2%, for a few seconds) is useful AFTER the parts are plated. The zinc electrolyte is brown, and plated parts come out w/a brownish film. This brownish color will remain on bright plated parts. The sulphuric acid dip removes the brown film and leaves the part all silver/gray.
You can see examples of this in the photos I've posted below. (check the "U-bolt" and "Large parts" sections). I used muriatic acid dips for these early plating runs, but am using sulphuric now. It comes out better.
Sean
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