enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Wilsonart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilsonart

    Wilsonart is a global manufacturer and distributor of high pressure laminates and other engineered composite materials, used in furniture, office and retail space, countertops, worktops and other applications. Headquartered in Temple, Texas, Wilsonart was founded by Ralph Wilson Sr. in 1956.

  3. Durcon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durcon

    Durcon Incorporated, a Wilsonart LLC company, [1] is a global company headquartered in Taylor, Texas that manufactures and fabricates chemical resistant epoxy resin countertops and sinks for use in laboratories, classrooms and other research environments. and solid surface counter tops for the commercial construction market.

  4. Speedball (art products) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speedball_(art_products)

    The following is a list of current products manufactured and marketed by Speedball. [5] The company also markets in the US products by other manufacturers, such as the ArtGraf brand of graphite putties and sticks by Portuguese company Viarco, [10] and drawing charcoal sticks by British company Coates Charcoal.

  5. Street elbow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_elbow

    Street elbows are available with bend angles of 90°, 45°, and 22.5°. They can be used in many plumbing applications, including water supply, drainage, sewers, vents, central vacuum systems, compressed air and gas lines, heating and air conditioning, sump pump drains, and other locations where plumbing fittings would be used to join sections of pipe.

  6. All Metal Products Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Metal_Products_Company

    Tin toy car, Toytown line, Wyandotte Toys. All Metal Products Company was an American toy company founded in 1920 and based in Wyandotte, Michigan for most of its history. It produced inexpensive pressed metal toys under the Wyandotte brand name, and was the largest manufacturer of toy guns in the US for several decades in the 20th century. [1]

  7. Muntz metal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muntz_metal

    Muntz metal (also known as yellow metal [1]) is an alpha-beta brass alloy composed of approximately 60% copper, 40% zinc and a trace of iron. It is named after George Fredrick Muntz, a metal-roller of Birmingham, England, who commercialised the alloy following his patent of 1832. [2] [3]

  8. List of brazing alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_brazing_alloys

    May facilitate stress cracking of some alloys by liquid metal embrittlement; prior stress relief annealing is required then, or use of a higher melting point alloy that does not melt until stress relief temperature of the base metal is reached. Light yellow color. Maximum service temperature 204 °C (intermittently 316 °C). 15.5: 16.5: 50: 18

  9. Chemical coloring of metals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_coloring_of_metals

    Brown or black can be used as a base color for copper patina. If the amount of chlorides decreases the color will be more bluish-green, if carbonate decreases, more yellow-green. [27] Black for copper. Solution of sodium polysulfide 2.5%, items must be submerged in the solution after color developing, wash, dry and wax or varnish colored object ...