Great method you came up with for applying the wire, Elias. Works well. Thanks.
Are you guys referring to the glass fused silica? If so, it can't be used for this kind of heating method without melting. I've done a number of heating tests, and it will get to a melting point rather quickly.
great idea the hacksaw! there was kind of a contradiction between buying a 6$ bubble stone and go get a 150$ dremel diamond saw to cut it!A fine toothed hacksaw works great for cutting off plastic and cutting out sections. Gets it done in a minute. Figure one blade for every 1-2 wicks.
great idea the hacksaw! there was kind of a contradiction between buying a 6$ bubble stone and go get a 150$ dremel diamond saw to cut it!
just got a mini hack saw, bench vise ready.... lets go slice some topfin
edit: I don't know what hacksaw you have... man almost 15 mn to go thru a slice. 3 blades to do just that.
The topfin I got is 2" thick and solid, no hole inside like in Scubas vid !?!? did i get the wrong stone?
looks like the diamond blade is a must have for this one...
Not sure if its glass fused silica. The link that Elias provided states the material is mineral and it is sintered, I believe the Aircore Sandstone is just compressed. They look similar but may be different, we need Elias to do the flame test.
View attachment 186832
my mistake, its peice of plastic at the center... it looked solid
the 5$ wheel sounds good... Now I get it, bubble or not, the stuff is really a stone!
and thats a wrap
View attachment 186845
Did you guys see my questions a few posts up?
We can have these made exactly how we want.
I just need answers to a few questions posted above.
Did you guys see my questions a few posts up?
We can have these made exactly how we want.
I just need answers to a few questions posted above.
Okay...I have questions.
Actually, my new supplier has questions.
I'll just copy his email here and you experts can tell me what you think.
"Before we start to produce and ship samples, we would like to learn details more about our potential customer and the application (because we have to choose the right material):
- What is the application? To evaporate a liquid? If yes: Which kind of liquid? An insectiziser or a perfume or something else?
- What are the quantities you need: As samples and may be in the future for a serial production?
- What are tolerances on OD of of the wick? What on length? Typical tolerances for this wick would be: 2,8+/-0,15 (or +/-0,1, closer tolerance possible, but will be more expensive) mm x 40+/-0,5 mm. Does this work for you?
- Which grade of open porosity is required? Is 30% something that might work for your appliction?
- What is the maximum temperature in the application?
- Do you need a material with a high or low thermal conductivity?"
Let's see if your answers match mine.
elias, have you ever compared the fish wicks to the fc-wicks there in your lab?
Does anyone have any suggestions on how NOT to break the wick when tightening the positive post up? I was tightening it up and it pulled the wick towards it and broke it. One down, three to go......