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  2. Westwood Studios - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westwood_Studios

    Westwood Studios, Inc. was an American video game developer based in Las Vegas, Nevada.It was founded by Brett Sperry and Louis Castle in 1985 as Brelous Software, but got changed after 2 months into Westwood Associates and was renamed to Westwood Studios when Virgin Games (later Virgin Interactive Entertainment) bought the company in 1992.

  3. List of Westwood Studios games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Westwood_Studios_games

    Original release date: 1989 Release years by system: 1989 – Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS Notes: . Role-playing video game; Published by Strategic Simulations; Part of the Dungeons & Dragons franchise

  4. Aluminium alloy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium_alloy

    Note that the term aircraft aluminium or aerospace aluminium usually refers to 7075. [65] [66] 4047 aluminium is a unique alloy used in both the aerospace and automotive applications as a cladding alloy or filler material. As filler, aluminium alloy 4047 strips can be combined to intricate applications to bond two metals. [67]

  5. Aluminium–magnesium alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium–magnesium_alloys

    Aluminium–magnesium alloys (AlMg) – standardised in the 5000 series – are aluminium alloys that are mainly made of aluminium and contain magnesium as the main alloy element. Most standardised alloys also contain small additives of manganese (AlMg(Mn)). Pure AlMg alloys and the AlMg(Mn) alloys belong to the medium-strength, natural (not ...

  6. 1100 aluminium alloy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1100_aluminium_alloy

    1100 aluminium alloy is an aluminium-based alloy in the "commercially pure" wrought family (1000 or 1xxx series). With a minimum of 99.0% aluminium, it is the most heavily alloyed of the 1000 series. It is also the mechanically strongest alloy in the series, and is the only 1000-series alloy commonly used in rivets.

  7. Aluminium–copper alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium–copper_alloys

    Aluminium–copper alloys (AlCu) are aluminium alloys that consist largely of aluminium (Al) and traces of copper (Cu) as the main alloying elements. Important grades also contain additives of magnesium , iron , nickel and silicon ( AlCu(Mg, Fe, Ni, Si) ), often manganese is also included to increase strength (see aluminium-manganese alloys ).

  8. 2218 aluminium alloy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2218_aluminium_alloy

    2218 aluminium alloy is an alloy in the wrought aluminium-copper family (2000 or 2xxx series). It is one of the most complex grades in the 2000 series, with at least 88.4% aluminium by weight. Unlike most other aluminium-copper alloys, 2218 is a high work-ability alloy, with relatively low for 2xxx series alloy yield strength of 255 MPa.

  9. Aluminium–zinc alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium–zinc_alloys

    Aluminium brass is a technically rather uncommon term for high-strength and partly seawater-resistant copper-zinc cast and wrought alloys with 55–66% copper, up to 7% aluminium, up to 4.5% iron, and 5% manganese. Aluminium bronze is technically correct as bronze, a zinc-free copper-tin casting alloy with aluminium content.