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Subject: 
Re: Strengthening Gears
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.technic
Date: 
Tue, 5 Mar 2002 02:25:44 GMT
Viewed: 
3669 times
  
In lugnet.technic, David Schilling writes:
In lugnet.technic, Thomas Avery writes:
In lugnet.technic, David Schilling writes:
<snip>
if you used hot water, the plastic will start to deform.  Some instructions
specifically state this.  For example:
http://www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?i=131756

Although this is a good instruction for "general use", I don't think a
single piece by itself will deform. If you handle it carefully (i.e. don't
squeeze it hard by picking it out of the boiling water with tongs), it may
not deform. But then I don't know at what point the ABS will deform under
its own weight, and I'm probably not going to try this :-)

TJ

A quick search on Google shows that ABS (Acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene)
has a melting point of 103-128°C.  Since water boils at 100°C, I don't have
any doubt that you would see some deformation by that point.

--
David Schilling



Oh people people people!!!  Stop what you're doing or thinking!!!

http://sparky.i989.net/legop1.htm

Have a boo halfway down the page!!!  I  mean this was, to date, the most
traumatic event of my life!!!!  (well, not really but it makes a great story
when I talk to my LEGO buddies!)

Don't *ever* put LEGO bricks in anything that remotely looks like boiling
water.  If bricks can't stand up to it, then fer sure gears won't be able to!!!

You have been warned!

We now return you to your regularly scheduled brick mayhem.

Dave



Message has 1 Reply:
  Re: Strengthening Gears
 
(...) So what caused the rash? Jude FUT .fun (22 years ago, 5-Mar-02, to lugnet.technic, lugnet.fun)

Message is in Reply To:
  Re: Strengthening Gears
 
(...) A quick search on Google shows that ABS (Acrylonitrile-butad...e-styrene) has a melting point of 103-128°C. Since water boils at 100°C, I don't have any doubt that you would see some deformation by that point. -- David Schilling (22 years ago, 5-Mar-02, to lugnet.technic)

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