Talk:Powder Metallurgy: Difference between revisions

From Open Source Ecology
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
(Added some Ideas I had)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
What about some quality control of the metal? Radioactive metal or heave metal contamination can be a problem. The contamination can also damage the whole production line.
Could we (at least for the less exotic metals) use a source of metal (such as sheet metal, so purified scrap metal), shred it in the hammermill, or cut it manually into small enough pieces, then put it in a diy ballmill/beadmill?  Would this possibly be cheaper?
 
--[[User:Eric|Eric]] ([[User talk:Eric|talk]]) 01:55, 11 Febuary 2018 (CET)
 
----
 
What about some quality control of the metal? Radioactive metal or heavy metal contamination can be a problem. The contamination can also damage the whole production line.
--[[User:Ruslan|Ruslan]] ([[User talk:Ruslan|talk]]) 09:40, 13 April 2019 (UTC)
--[[User:Ruslan|Ruslan]] ([[User talk:Ruslan|talk]]) 09:40, 13 April 2019 (UTC)


Could we (at least for the less exotic metals) use a source of metal (such as sheet metal, so purified scrap metal), shred it in the hammermill, or cut it manually into small enough pieces, then put it in a diy ballmill/beadmill?  Would this possibly be cheaper?
----
 
For Radioactivity, [[User: Marcin]] is probably the expert (due to the whole fusion research degree(s) stuff), but I could wager that a simple Geiger–Müller Tube would work.  For heavy metals I would say chemical assays (either once at the beginning of using the feedstock (low  end), low end + random sampling (medium end) ), or use some sort of sort of Bulk Material Analyzer (High End)
 
--[[User:Eric|Eric]] ([[User talk:Eric|talk]]) 17:00, 13 April 2019 (UTC)


--[[User:Eric|Eric]] ([[User talk:Eric|talk]]) 01:55, 11 Febuary 2018 (CET)
----

Latest revision as of 17:00, 13 April 2019

Could we (at least for the less exotic metals) use a source of metal (such as sheet metal, so purified scrap metal), shred it in the hammermill, or cut it manually into small enough pieces, then put it in a diy ballmill/beadmill? Would this possibly be cheaper?

--Eric (talk) 01:55, 11 Febuary 2018 (CET)


What about some quality control of the metal? Radioactive metal or heavy metal contamination can be a problem. The contamination can also damage the whole production line. --Ruslan (talk) 09:40, 13 April 2019 (UTC)


For Radioactivity, User: Marcin is probably the expert (due to the whole fusion research degree(s) stuff), but I could wager that a simple Geiger–Müller Tube would work. For heavy metals I would say chemical assays (either once at the beginning of using the feedstock (low end), low end + random sampling (medium end) ), or use some sort of sort of Bulk Material Analyzer (High End)

--Eric (talk) 17:00, 13 April 2019 (UTC)