AW: AW: [meteorite-list] RE: POLL: rustiest most unstable known
From: Martin Altmann <altmann_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed May 31 16:47:36 2006 Message-ID: <010701c684db$55544c50$4f41fea9_at_name86d88d87e2> Ooops, Doug, it was really a bad joke from me and as I don't know, whether e.g. Mr.S.A. from C. will try it, when he will have decided that stones are the better wife, I have to make it clear: Lithium is toxic. (ad a lithium terapy against depressions has to be surveyed by a doc). Back to the secret knowledge of our grandmas. Egg-plants and knob celery have a strong tendency to oxidize directly after slicing, perhaps we should ask them for a proper recipe? (Cooking in olive oil with garlic and lemon and hush in the preserving jar with an affectionately painted label?) I have no major problems with rust, Simply because I don't collect that much irons, and I'm avoiding such stuff like Campo, Nantan, Dronino & Co. Until now it was always sufficient to keep my irons oiled - I use the gunoil called Ballistol and only in a few cases I had to play a varnish. And ooops again: NEVER apply oil to STONE meteorites!! Martin -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- Von: MexicoDoug_at_aol.com [mailto:MexicoDoug@aol.com] Gesendet: Mittwoch, 31. Mai 2006 19:29 An: Meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com; altmann@meteorite-martin.de Betreff: Re: AW: [meteorite-list] RE: POLL: rustiest most unstable known Martin A. wrote: << Hehe, Lithium grease, applied on the tongue it may relieve your depressions in watching your irons rusting to pulp. NOOOOOOO just a joke! Kids, DON'T do it at home! Buckleboo! >> Hey Martin, rumor is that Valium straight up in grain alcohol taken with a pinch of gun oil shaken not stirred lifts the spirits of sad irons, or at least blows them away. Too much lithium grease is hard on the chamois. (I did try "white" lithium grease left over from my cycling days, and it worked as well as the next grease, with the exception that it is a finer, less oily grease than most and for that it gets a minimal positive. But in the big scheme of things, even the best secret formula of gun oil can't cure cancer! If you enjoy curating like this its time to get a pet. Though, I would like to see some further discussion on "dielectric" greases, namely the one I used that was for spark plugs and worked fine on a crappy Campo that was thrown away which I rescued in the name of science. As Steve Schoner points out, corrosion is a redox reaction and the best bet is to make sure they go where you want their potential, or better yet, just stonewall (pun?) the flow of electrons (Remember=>loss of electrons = oxidation). You need your electrons to stay put on your base metal, so an appropriate dielectric compound is the answer if you are not playing in the make-shift lab to better "prepare" your specimen by roasting it in the oven and drowning it in the black-magical solvents that some Merlin out there is offering. That where the dielectric "grease" comes in (it probably isn't a grease at all, not much more than brake oils or transmission oils are oils). Alternately, transmission fluid was suggested. A big pickle jar filled with transmission fluid ought to work well especially when heated for a time to engine temperature. It does penetrate well as someone wants to make sure it gets between the teeth of the transmission gears, not to mention all the corrosion inhibiters. But, I would still try my luck with ordinary this: http://www.midwayautosupply.com/manufacturerminorcategory.asp?Dielectric%20G re ase Or from Germany proven on especially nasty Italian specimens: http://www.international-auto.com/index.cfm/fa/p/pid/2765/sc/8140 Or something a bit more exotic along the same lines: http://www3.3m.com/catalog/us/en001/auto_marine_aero/aerospace/node_GS9NWKSQ ZT be/root_GST1T4S9TCgv/vroot_GSNNJ6NQDKge/gvel_S3PQPD4JXXgl/theme_us_aerospace _3 _0/command_AbcPageHandler/output_html Or, Maybe Rusty Bill has these all beat, btw since the US military knows a lot and uses it on their oriented nosecones. A material that has great dielectric properties and goes on so thin, you can't see it that comes with a light maintenance schedule. Cada quien su rollo (to each his own eggroll)... http://www.paleobond.com/MeteoriteProducts.htm Then again, it all depends on whether these roasted, char-broiled, and parboiled, chemically cured, coated and pickled pieces of metal really have a heart of a meteorite left in them or are just chemically modified vulcanized masterpieces* for boasting taxidermeteoricists. It's probably "ok - but why????", and loses all kinds of trace stuff near the surface...not that corrosion wouldn't have the same effect. That meteoriticistical alteration would be a good question for a museum curator as long as it is a research collection and not a Ripley's Believe-It-Or-Not collection where a chunk from a junkyard would be just as an effective draw with the right promotion. Hopefully if I ever get picked up by a UFO the beings won't be so crude in their pickling methods. I'd just like to tell them that once you loose the natural look and feel of things, getting cremed is better than a slow death by burial in fancy boxes. It's only supposed to be a duck if it walks, talks, quacks and poops like a duck. *meteorites from Planet Vulcan, the OTHER Mercury we never can see. Saludos, Doug Received on Wed 31 May 2006 01:54:57 PM PDT |
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