|
Posted by doc on 10/05/03 11:38
i stand corrected. thanks for the info. however, unless the tape is kept
at 300+ degrees for the lowest i read being mercury, then it wouldn't be
evaporated right?
drd
"Neil Smith [MVP Digital Media]" <neil@nospam.com> wrote in message
news:q10ds151n71tlq28ii45d14o3gig98g9np@4ax.com...
> On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 15:23:41 GMT, "doc" <doc@drdimento.net> wrote:
>
>>hmmmmm, "evaporated metal" - - metal doesn't evaporate. it oxidizes but
>>it
>>can not evaporate. would take 5000 degrees.
>
> Bloody nonsense, way lower - and all metals can be made to evaporate
> (apart from one or two semi-metals at ambient pressure, which sublime)
>
> Check out your facts before posting again : Here are some exxamples of
> "facts" :
>
> http://www.noblemind.com/search.exe?keyword=Barium+Boiling+Point&var=2
> http://www.noblemind.com/search.exe?keyword=Mercury+Boiling+Point&var=2
> http://www.noblemind.com/search.exe?keyword=Lithium+Boiling+Point&var=2
> http://www.noblemind.com/search.exe?keyword=Zinc+Boiling+Point&var=2
> http://www.noblemind.com/search.exe?keyword=Lead+Boiling+Point&var=2
>
>
>>drd
>>
>>"webpa" <webpa@aol.com> wrote in message
>>news:1136568384.291913.175010@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>>> Sorry. I was forced to stop reading your essay when you described
>>> "oxide particles" on DV tape. AFAIK, there is NO oxide coated (miniDV,
>>> DVCPro, etc) tape. It is all coated with a film of evaporated metal
>>> (among other things).
>>>
>>
>
Navigation:
[Reply to this message]
|