The issue is contact fretting. I had a large page on the USL Engineering Wiki devoted to the issue. There was a graph showing contact resistance versus time for several types of contacts. Nickle on nickle was among the worst while gold on gold was the best. Contact fretting is an issue when a contact carries very low current. It is why switches and relays have minimum contact current ratings. It is why telephone companies run "sealing current" on local loops even if DC is not required on the loop (Plain Old Telephone Service uses DC to power the telephone and detect on-hook, off-hook, and dial pulses. DSL does not need the DC, but telcos still run DC as a sealing current to maintain the quality of splices). The CMS and similar products have a battery current of about 10 uA. That is not high enough to eliminate fretting, which is why I suggest gold on gold contacts. That 10 uA powers the security chip that holds the private key, runs the real time clock, and detects tamper switches and temperature extremes. The tamper switches also have a contact fretting issue. In the latest CMS design, we increased the tamper switch current to several mA when main power was available to "seal" the switches, then drop to a couple uA when main power was not available. Contact fretting was also the cause of the "white screen" issue on the JSD-100. Though gold contact connectors were specified, one run used a connector on the front panel cable that did not have gold. Unplugging it and plugging it back in would solve the issue for several months. Coating the contacts with Cramolin or Deoxit ( https://caig.com/ ) makes the contacts last even longer, but not as long as gold on gold. Finally, the CCH-100 has a cable between the power supply and the glasses that has 2.5 mm TRS connectors on each end. In the prototypes, we used tin plated connectors. They very quickly became intermittent. We switched to gold and had no problems.
It does not take much gold to solve contact fretting problems.
Harold
It does not take much gold to solve contact fretting problems.
Harold
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