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Frogwatch[_2_] April 14th 10 04:17 PM

Interesting material, any boating apps?
 
For a new project, I bought some tungsten foil that is .002" thick.
It is expensive.
When I opened it and held it up, I thought this is so stiff and heavy
it sure seems much thicker but we measured it and it is .002". Of
course Tungsten has a density of about 19 so I knew it would be heavy
but the stiffness exceeds what I expected. Of course, it is also a
hard material.
Where in boating do we need very thin, very hard and very dense metal?

hk April 14th 10 04:19 PM

Interesting material, any boating apps?
 
On 4/14/10 11:17 AM, Frogwatch wrote:
For a new project, I bought some tungsten foil that is .002" thick.
It is expensive.
When I opened it and held it up, I thought this is so stiff and heavy
it sure seems much thicker but we measured it and it is .002". Of
course Tungsten has a density of about 19 so I knew it would be heavy
but the stiffness exceeds what I expected. Of course, it is also a
hard material.
Where in boating do we need very thin, very hard and very dense metal?



Have it crocheted into anchor chain.


--
http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym

Loogypicker[_2_] April 14th 10 04:49 PM

Interesting material, any boating apps?
 
On Apr 14, 11:19*am, hk wrote:
On 4/14/10 11:17 AM, Frogwatch wrote:

For a new project, I bought some tungsten foil that is .002" thick.
It is expensive.
When I opened it and held it up, I thought this is so stiff and heavy
it sure seems much thicker but we measured it and it is .002". *Of
course Tungsten has a density of about 19 so I knew it would be heavy
but the stiffness exceeds what I expected. *Of course, it is also a
hard material.
Where in boating do we need very thin, very hard and very dense metal?


Have it crocheted into anchor chain.

--http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym


Go drill some holes in the structural components of your boat trailer
like they taught you in those mechanical engineering classes you
allegedly took, moron. Are you going to drill holes in the compression
flange or the tension flange? Oh, and when the trailer is loaded,
which IS the compression and tensions flanges?

Larry[_14_] April 15th 10 12:37 AM

Interesting material, any boating apps?
 
Loogypicker wrote:
On Apr 14, 11:19 am, wrote:

On 4/14/10 11:17 AM, Frogwatch wrote:


For a new project, I bought some tungsten foil that is .002" thick.
It is expensive.
When I opened it and held it up, I thought this is so stiff and heavy
it sure seems much thicker but we measured it and it is .002". Of
course Tungsten has a density of about 19 so I knew it would be heavy
but the stiffness exceeds what I expected. Of course, it is also a
hard material.
Where in boating do we need very thin, very hard and very dense metal?

Have it crocheted into anchor chain.

--http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym

Go drill some holes in the structural components of your boat trailer
like they taught you in those mechanical engineering classes you
allegedly took, moron. Are you going to drill holes in the compression
flange or the tension flange? Oh, and when the trailer is loaded,
which IS the compression and tensions flanges?

That's too easy.

Tim April 15th 10 12:09 PM

Interesting material, any boating apps?
 
On Apr 14, 10:17*am, Frogwatch wrote:
For a new project, I bought some tungsten foil that is .002" thick.
It is expensive.
When I opened it and held it up, I thought this is so stiff and heavy
it sure seems much thicker but we measured it and it is .002". *Of
course Tungsten has a density of about 19 so I knew it would be heavy
but the stiffness exceeds what I expected. *Of course, it is also a
hard material.
Where in boating do we need very thin, very hard and very dense metal?


outboard/transom reinforcement?


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