🔧 Craft Your Future with Copper Magic!
The ELK Copper Foil Tape is a 1” x 66ft roll designed for exceptional conductivity and strong adhesion, making it ideal for a variety of applications including electronics, crafts, and repairs. Its corrosion and oxidation resistance ensures durability in various environments, while its easy application process allows for hassle-free use.
V**T
Good product
Used for the garden to keep away snails. Works great
J**C
Actually works
I was fairly sure this tape would make zero difference in the noise coming from my guitar when plugged in and idle. Oh how wrong I was. It’s so quiet now it’s incredible. Relatively easy to lay down. Plus it feels like i could work for NASA on spacecraft now.
E**.
Great for guitars
Great stuff! Easy to work with, adheres very well even if you need to adjust it. Didn't tear even once and most important it sticks to wood. Width was perfect too.
J**1
Just like real
I coated 2" PVC to make it look like copper gutter, it takes a bit of time to apply to avoid wrinkles but I was able to get most out as they were little. There were some spots in a 10' pipe that wrinkled a bit due to an every so slight angle change but in the end, from 10 feet away...it looks like copper pipe. Fairly easy to use and get good results, smaller projects may be even easier.
M**R
Great copper tape.
The media could not be loaded. I use this copper conductive tape inside my clothes dryer to reduce most of the static electricity that builds up. It holds up extremely well and stops most of the static (the magnets reduce the rest of the static as the electrically charged clothes fall through the magnetic field, causing a current to flow and balance out the charge).
M**
Awesome product
Can't upload a picture of shielding I did on my bass but this product is pretty good. Once stuck on bass wood(cavity and sides or it) or top clear finish, it won't slip or move anywhere. I truly recommend this product.
Z**Z
Easy to use and shape, very conductive adhesive.
This copper foil tape is easy to cut, easy to peel, and easy to shape and apply. The adhesive is highly conductive and allows for layering tape to cover a wider area or unusual shapes. It does exactly what it needs to.
M**O
Perfect for my guitar build
Covered my guitar electric pickups and controls just the way I needed.
E**S
Faraday
Works very well and very good glue and flexibility for such a thin copper tape. I made a faraday bag with it and it works wonderfully.
S**A
A good adhesive conductive tape
Adhesive part of the tape is also conductive. So,Completely satisfied with this product.
C**T
Seems to work
Seems like decent quality.
N**O
Great for electronics shielding
Good electronics shielding tape. I've used this in guitar cavities, amongst other things. It can easily be soldered to if you want to ground a wire to it.
G**O
Only a Partial Snail and Slug Deterrent
I only bought a roll of the tape so that I could create a two-inch-high 'wall' around two small (maybe a foot tall) begonia-like plants whose petals had been devoured by snails and slugs. I didn't have any good-sized stakes or metal rods to use as supports, so I used five wooden pencil crayons as the basis of support for the wall and thus frame a small compound around each plant.Unfortunately there were snails and slugs who would still scale the wall and end up harboured in the plants' foliage, but these were especially determined creatures ─ I think most others were turned away.Note that I never removed the backing to the tape ─ I just wound it around the outside of the five strategically placed pencils as was, and then connected together the two ends. Because of that, I have no idea how good the adhesive may be.I next considered doubling the height of the wall, but then a unique notion struck me to use a defective stapler we have that never closes the arms of any of the staples it dispenses. I used the stapler to place a barrier of staples all around the topmost part of the two walls, with the staple arms of course all protruding outward.This seemed especially effective, although I probably should double the staple barrier, for smaller slugs can still squeeze between them. However, Summer struck with gusto, so there has been limited snail and slug activity due to the ambient dryness, and of course the oppressive heat of day.With the advent of cooler and damper September weather, snails and slugs will be back in numbers to prove whether my staple barrier near the summit of each wall is truly effective. However, the two plants aren't producing any more blooms, and the petal-free remains (receptacles?) of the original blooms are drying out and appear to me that they might be 'going to seed' in time. But I could be wrong about this.It is just after 1:30 a.m. as I type up this review, so I can't supply any photos of what I am poorly describing, nor can I identify what kind of plants the pair actually are. My wife bought and planted them, but she never knew what they were ─ she only liked their appearance.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago