We had some issues in the past with some people deleting content in a fit of pique (sometimes going back years), trashing some of the conversations that had gone on, which meant that there's a timer...
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We had some issues in the past with some people deleting content in a fit of pique (sometimes going back years), trashing some of the conversations that had gone on, which meant that there's a timer...
It is done. And I can undo it if that's not the one you meant...
Are they leaded enamels? If the answer is "don't know", I'd suggest treating them as if they are.
https://www.quicktest.co.uk/collections/gold-testing-kits-complete-sets-including-silver-testers
Be aware that the acids have limited shelf lives.
If it's < £135 the seller charges you VAT and supplies it to HMRC.
If it's > £135 HMRC via Royal Mail charges you VAT (and possibly duty).
Can you describe any of the projects in it? Assuming it was a projects-based one (given it was Waterstones).
From memory, Jinks McGrath's rings book forges the shoulders to a knife edge if that's what you mean.
There is that issue in the UK of late, I don't know if it's a problem elsewhere. All of mine I've had for quite a while, so these days I only have to worry about exchange. And wince at the cost...
A new regulator is not needed, what's supplied in the Hamilton gas kit is fine.
As for numbers on regulators - some have them, some don't. I've never needed to know what number setting it was it, I...
Bijou Moderne would be the one I'd go for.
I'm assuming the Delft clay from any of the European Cookson presences still comes from the UK?
Of all things, you'd hope something named "Delft clay"...
I've never found a QR->POL adapter, I'm afraid. The QR regulators are fixed at 37mbar, which is pointless for a Sievert.
I think you'll need to find a "real" Calor supplier rather than a hardware...
The fitting on your Sievert is a standard POL fitting - any decent supplier of Calor (or similar) cylinders should be able to rent you one; you'll need a suitable spanner too. Over here, anywhere...
Scribd's a mixed bag, but that does look like the doc. Bizarre that they haven't retained it (and I can't find it on Matthey's site, nor on the Wayback machine).
They did? I've only seen the expensive variant here!
Diamond flywheel tool. Popular in the 80s; there's not many seem to do it any more in the UK.
I do like his work. Met him a couple of times.
I wonder if that's lead or pewter being used for the form?
TBH, if you're working with a jewellery designer they should be able to guide you on all of this.
It sounds somewhat like you're trying to run before you can walk, I'm afraid.
That's one of the limitations, yes.
Why?
IP location tools aren't always terribly accurate, but I use them aware of their limitations.
How are the Philipines this time of year?
There's a DIY of making something similar I was taught - dissolve silver nitrate in water; add salt & dissolve until no more dissolves (silver chloride precipitates out). Filter, add some tartaric...
Yes it works.
No it's not remotely robust. The coating isn't thick enough to withstand any handling.
Have you seen the description in Walsh's video? https://youtu.be/nwhO6qqyhrY
We weren't. I was watching to see when you started posting spam.
I think the CNC plasma cutter & CNC mill he uses will set you back considerably more... I'm surprised that tough resin handled as much abuse as that, let alone the normal one.
https://3d.formlabs.com//rs/060-UIG-504/images/WP-EN-How-to-Do-Rapid-Tooling-for-Sheet-Metal-Forming-With-3D-Printed-Dies.pdf - no idea if that link will work if you've not signed up for it.
While...