Goop Ben 10 Omniverse Wiki
Goop | Ben 10 Wiki | Fandom
Goop | Ben 10 Wiki | Fandom He talks about "bluing salts" at some point, perhaps in another video i don't remember. anyone able to explain the ingredients of this "goop"? sincerely, alveprins. It's made it waterproof using a goop recipe recommended to me (beeswax/boiled lineseed oil/gum turpentine). i happened to already have those ingredients. it has quite a potent smell it didn't change the appearance of the leather or the carvings, unlike an earlier test soaking leather in wax. making sheaths is fun.
Goop (Ben 10) | Fictional Characters Wiki | Fandom
Goop (Ben 10) | Fictional Characters Wiki | Fandom I want to harden some small things with a lot of surface detail. probably made from w2. can you guess what i'm thinking of? i guess that avoiding decarb would be greated challenge to keeping the surface detail hard? i have some of that grey goop you paint on before austenising to protect against. You do not want to quench the handle tangs, so an edge quench in the goop with the handle tangs hanging down might work. if you use a steel that hardens well in goop, which limits you to an alloy slow quench steel like 5160 or o 1. What i have use to edge quench is a roasting pan filled with my version of goddard's goop. its a mixture of pan drippings, vegetable oil, old candles, and a little parrafin. If you get a good goop in the inside, it will never come off. apparently they had glue like that in the bronze age. it can get wet, but if you let it soak, it will come apart. the japanese use it for various sword parts (gluing on the kurikata and kojiri, sometimes also gluing on the fuchi and kashira). the japanese call it nikawa.
Goop/Gallery | Ben 10 Wiki | Fandom
Goop/Gallery | Ben 10 Wiki | Fandom What i have use to edge quench is a roasting pan filled with my version of goddard's goop. its a mixture of pan drippings, vegetable oil, old candles, and a little parrafin. If you get a good goop in the inside, it will never come off. apparently they had glue like that in the bronze age. it can get wet, but if you let it soak, it will come apart. the japanese use it for various sword parts (gluing on the kurikata and kojiri, sometimes also gluing on the fuchi and kashira). the japanese call it nikawa. Are you using flux? is the smoke/goop from the mig welder getting in between the layers? finally, how hard are you hitting it to set the weld? if you're using flux and smacking it really hard to get the flux out, you may be blowing the weld apart on impact. gentle taps until you know it's solid. The goop helped me from spilling transmission fluid and /or other oils all over the place but that's as far as it goes. i'll get a better edge quench without it. i will re do this piece, normalizing it 3x, and i will try the clay again in water. i'll move through the sanding process with progressive grits as outlined. This weekend, i finally hardened a messer blade of 1075 i've been working on. i have a temperature controlled heat treating furnace (a home made vertical 2 burner furnace with a baffle it heats quite evenly), and i soaked at 1475f for 3 minutes, then quenched horizontally into 400f canola oil . I quench almost everything in a 10 year old batch of goddard's goop, which is an even mix of transmission fluid, lard, and paraffin wax. sets up solid at room temperature, and i usually melt some down with a scrap bar, a trough or all of it depending on the piece, which gives me a nice hot oil bath for my blades.
Goop/Gallery | Ben 10 Wiki | Fandom
Goop/Gallery | Ben 10 Wiki | Fandom Are you using flux? is the smoke/goop from the mig welder getting in between the layers? finally, how hard are you hitting it to set the weld? if you're using flux and smacking it really hard to get the flux out, you may be blowing the weld apart on impact. gentle taps until you know it's solid. The goop helped me from spilling transmission fluid and /or other oils all over the place but that's as far as it goes. i'll get a better edge quench without it. i will re do this piece, normalizing it 3x, and i will try the clay again in water. i'll move through the sanding process with progressive grits as outlined. This weekend, i finally hardened a messer blade of 1075 i've been working on. i have a temperature controlled heat treating furnace (a home made vertical 2 burner furnace with a baffle it heats quite evenly), and i soaked at 1475f for 3 minutes, then quenched horizontally into 400f canola oil . I quench almost everything in a 10 year old batch of goddard's goop, which is an even mix of transmission fluid, lard, and paraffin wax. sets up solid at room temperature, and i usually melt some down with a scrap bar, a trough or all of it depending on the piece, which gives me a nice hot oil bath for my blades.
Goop | Ben 10 Aliens Wiki | Fandom
Goop | Ben 10 Aliens Wiki | Fandom This weekend, i finally hardened a messer blade of 1075 i've been working on. i have a temperature controlled heat treating furnace (a home made vertical 2 burner furnace with a baffle it heats quite evenly), and i soaked at 1475f for 3 minutes, then quenched horizontally into 400f canola oil . I quench almost everything in a 10 year old batch of goddard's goop, which is an even mix of transmission fluid, lard, and paraffin wax. sets up solid at room temperature, and i usually melt some down with a scrap bar, a trough or all of it depending on the piece, which gives me a nice hot oil bath for my blades.
Goop - Ben 10 Omniverse Wiki
Goop - Ben 10 Omniverse Wiki
GOOP FLAVORED COLORS #ben10
GOOP FLAVORED COLORS #ben10
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