Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Very importantly, constantan can be processed for self-temperature compensation to match a wide range of test material coefficients of thermal expansion.A-alloy is supplied in self-temperature-compensation (S-T-C) numbers 00, 03, 05, 06, 09, 13, 15, 18, 30, 40, and 50, for use on test materials with corresponding thermal expansion coefficients, expressed in parts per million by length (or μm ...
The family includes Kovar, FerNiCo I, FerNiCo II, and Dumet. The name is made up of the chemical symbols of its constituent three elements. "Dumet" is a portmanteau of "dual" and "metal," because it is a heterogeneous alloy, usually fabricated in the form of a wire with an alloy core and a copper cladding. These alloys possess the properties of ...
The Notz Metal (officially Notz Metal, Inc.) is a Swiss integrated steel and wire manufacturing company based in Biel/Bienne (BE), Switzerland.Founded in 1898, the company is still privately held and managed by the third generation of the Notz family.
0 90 1900 1964 Experimental locomotive «Bastard» Be 2/5: 11001 1918 1 0 75 736 1937 Experimental locomotive «MIDI-Locomotive» Be 3/5: 12201 1919 1 0 75 1177 1963 Experimental locomotive «Slow Berta» Be 4/6: 12301 1919 1 0 75 1570 1963 Experimental locomotive «Doryphore» Be 4/6: 12302 1919 1 0 75 1415 1965 Experimental locomotive Ce 4/4
The company began in 1867 as the William Butcher Steel Works. The products that founders William Butcher, Jr. (a son of the founder of W. & S. Butcher Steel Works, a scion of the Sheffield, England steel industry) and Philip Syng Justice (an American manufacturer) planned to produce were cast-steel locomotive tires (that is, in British spelling, tyres) and cast-steel forgings, with a plan to ...
As quoted in an online version of: David R. Lide (ed), CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 84th Edition.CRC Press. Boca Raton, Florida, 2003; Section 4, Properties of the Elements and Inorganic Compounds; Physical Properties of the Rare Earth Metals
Gap Mining worked the mines for nickel until 1860, when they were closed as unprofitable. It sold the mine to Joseph Wharton in late 1862. Between 1862 and 1893, 4.5 million pounds of nickel were extracted from the site, amounting to as much as twenty-five percent of world production in some years.
This page was last edited on 16 November 2024, at 12:16 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.