Lexan vs acrylic
Frank Boettcher inscribed in red ink for all to know:
On Wed, 06 Dec 2006 06:37:53 -0500, Charlie Morgan wrote:
On Mon, 04 Dec 2006 20:49:18 GMT, "Roger Long" wrote:
Steve Lusardi wrote:
Rodger,
I don't know where you have received your info, but it is a bit
flawed.
I called the largest plastic supplier and fabricator in the phone book near
Portland, Maine. I'm always a bit suspicious though when I ask the girl who
answers the phone if I can talk to someone about something and she goes on
to answer the questions herself.
I take it you would go with Lexan?
Over 30 years of being involved with materials choices like this, I've often
found that "better", when applied to something like scratch resistance,
means you could detect a small difference in two alternatives used side by
side under identical circumstances but wouldn't be aware of any significant
difference otherwise. I'm trying to figure out if the scratch resistance of
these two materials falls into that catagory.
I am about to order some polycast myself. It now comes in a version called
Polycast SAR. You might want to google that term.
CWM
Always used Polycarbonate for ports and hatches and am not familiar
with Polycast SAR. Can you comment on its ability to resist
differential expansion cracking and crazing? For instance, if you use
it in an application where a portion of it (border for instance) sees
less temperature change than the balance, does it tend to crack at the
boundry between the two temperatures from cyclic differential
expansion.
Frank
At least with acrylic (Plexiglas), the process of flame polishing the
edges used by many fabricators can impart serious stress in the edges,
resulting in premature crazing approximately 1/2" out from the edge.
I do not know how polycarbonates are polished.
bob
s/v Eolian
Seattle
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