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Is hairline chatter related to metal flow?
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<p>[QUOTE="GDJMSP, post: 1622679, member: 112"]Mathew the annealing process does not begin until the coins enter the furnace. And it ends the moment they leave the furnace. Anything that happens to the planchets before they enter the furnace is not part of the annealing process. And cooling and washing the planchets after they leave the furnace is not part of the annealing process either. The only thing that happens to the planchets during the annealing process is that they are heated.</p><p><br /></p><p>What you are saying is like saying that washing the planchets is part of the striking process. It isn't. The striking process starts when the planchet enters the coining chamber and it ends the moment it leaves the striking chamber.</p><p><br /></p><p>And yes, even today, the planchets still remain laying flat and still, not touching other planchets, while they are in the furnace. Do you know how I know that ? No, I don't have any other videos, or pictures in recent books. But yet I still know it to be true. And I know it because sintered planchets still exist. And the only way a sintered planchet can occur is if the planchets are laying individually, flat and still, inside the the furnace.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="GDJMSP, post: 1622679, member: 112"]Mathew the annealing process does not begin until the coins enter the furnace. And it ends the moment they leave the furnace. Anything that happens to the planchets before they enter the furnace is not part of the annealing process. And cooling and washing the planchets after they leave the furnace is not part of the annealing process either. The only thing that happens to the planchets during the annealing process is that they are heated. What you are saying is like saying that washing the planchets is part of the striking process. It isn't. The striking process starts when the planchet enters the coining chamber and it ends the moment it leaves the striking chamber. And yes, even today, the planchets still remain laying flat and still, not touching other planchets, while they are in the furnace. Do you know how I know that ? No, I don't have any other videos, or pictures in recent books. But yet I still know it to be true. And I know it because sintered planchets still exist. And the only way a sintered planchet can occur is if the planchets are laying individually, flat and still, inside the the furnace.[/QUOTE]
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