sillygoosegirl (
sillygoosegirl) wrote2005-01-12 09:09 pm
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gold
Whoever said gold is soft was a big fat liar.
It's not soft; it's brittle.
And it's broke.
There's $150 down the drain.
It's not soft; it's brittle.
And it's broke.
There's $150 down the drain.
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So I am just slightly devastated now.
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Though I would like to point out that I think it's incredibly awesome y'all are making the rings yourselves. It's so personal and...neat. I'm impressed. I don't think I'd have the patience to do that. I got so frustrated trying to put shelf paper in this morning I burst into tears...
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Suggestions: (1) You can melt gold with stove range temperatures. Now, if you can only figure out how to make it into wire again, you're set, as that will make it one piece. (2) While braiding, work with it warm (id check some literature, but ~100F is probably good) but not melted so that its more flexible.
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I didnt realize its melting temp was quite that high, i was pretty sure you could melt it on a stove top - maybe im thinking 24kt gold, and 18kt has enough stuff added that its not as much of a problem.
You can't reduce hardness, its a property of the material. Nor do i think scratching it is what you are concerned about. I dont think you'll effect the strength of the material, especially at relatively small fractions of the melting temp.
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I expect that 18K gold metal has various different metal phases. Heating and (super)cooling the metal can change which phase it is in, and it's commensurate properties. I could be wrong about the different phases, though.
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http://pruffle.mit.edu/3.00/Lecture_36_web/node1.html
The Au-Sn phase diagram shows several different states. The solid colors are pure states, and the lines are combination of states. The Au-Ag diagram unfortunately doesn't go low enough to be of interest.
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