Thanks for being willing to take the time and effort to do this rather than calling the scrappers and calling it a day. I hope you find good homes for everything. Other people you might want to contact are Don Black Linecasting ( about the Intertype machine, Dave Seat of Hot Metal Services ( about the Ludlow machine you’ve got there, and the folks at Bindery Tools ( and Boggs Graphics Equipment ( and Wired Bids ( about the rest of the equipment. The typecases (the drawers type is stored in) and their cabinets will be pretty easy to sell. It would be a terrible waste to see it scrapped. The Miehle beast will be a bit harder to find a buyer for if for no other reason than it’s size, but hopefully someone will take it and restore it as they’re not very common any more. They’re quite popular with jobbing letterpress printers. Someone will quite likely be interested in the Heidelberg Original platen press.
Typemetal mix archive#
You would do well to contact Fritz Klinke at NA Graphics ( for details on it as he owns the rights to the Vandercook name and archive and has all their old sales records and files and such. A robust etb-type metalorganic framework showing polarity-exclusive adsorption of acetone over methanol for their azeotropic mixture. The hand-crank Vandercook is likely to be quite sell-able as those kinds of press are very popular with art printers these days. This would make it a bit rarer than other styles of machine. You’ve got some very nice equipment there! I believe your Intertype machine (which was a clone of the famous Linotype) is of the “mix-master” style with the auxiliary short magazines off to the right of the main magazines. A lesser price, but better than the scrapyards, would be useful to operators of Linotypes and Ludlows out there.īest of luck in finding homes for these items, especially that big Miehle flatbed. In short lots (50 lbs) on Ebay, it tends to pull $1.00 lb +. If you can contact an established letterpress printer who deals with hot metal typesetting (vs photopolymer) they can give you a good idea of what you have, at which point you can advertise and determine what the market is or isn’t-at which point scrapping could be considered.īTW, that “lead” is typemetal alloy and is worth much more than most scrapyards will offer.
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I think many operators would not be mindful of paying scrap rate for the mats, and picking the various fonts apart, while tedious, is not impossible.Īlso seen in the pictures was the base for a Rouse Vertical Miterer, a couple Addressograph machines (that come with thousands of plates). They are actually very much sought after, and would be of value to many people who own these machines. Those “Brass Letters” are more than likely the casting matrices for either the Ludlow (cabinet shown) or the Linotype machine. Since we have mixed all the brass fonts should we go ahead and scrap them? Is it worth the time and effort to piece and part all this stuff out or should we just focus on a couple things? We are in Western Ohio and know shipping costs would be astronomical if pieces were going very far.
Typemetal mix full#
Some of the equipment we have is a Vandercook #2, quoins and keys, binder machine, lead saws, smelter with tons of scrap lead, brass letters by the door full that we had started mixing for scrap, Heiderburg machine with ink bottles on top, Meilhigh 1907 printer, 4 huge steel covered tables with shelves or lead print, One beautiful angled case Ludlow missing a drawer, an 4 x 4 box of assorted wooden blocks and lots of other stuff and PAPER we haven’t a clue what it is. We started throwing away old newspaper and scrapping some lead items just to get them out of the way. This is not our area of expertise we were hoping to open a retail establishment. Superconductors.We have recently purchased a building that has an abandoned newspaper and print shop in its entirety. Superconductivity to external pressure is a universal feature in HEA-type
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Superconductor (TaNb)0.67(HfZrTi)0.33, which shows that the robustness of This trend is quite similar to that observed in an HEA However, in the HEA-typeĪgInSnPbBiTe5, Tc is almost independent of pressure, for pressures ranging fromġ3.0 to 35.1 GPa.
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Temperature (Tc) decreases with pressure. When the superconductivity of theĬsCl-type PbTe is observed, it is found that its superconducting transition To an orthorhombic Pnma structure at low pressures, and further transitions toĪ CsCl-type structure at high pressures. PbTe exhibits a structural transition from a NaCl-type Superconducting states in HEA-type metal telluride (MTe M = Ag, In, Sn, Pb,īi) under high pressure. In this study, we investigate the robustness of
Typemetal mix pdf#
Riad Kasem, Yuki Nakahira, Hitoshi Yamaoka, Ryo Matsumoto, Aichi Yamashita, Hirofumi Ishii, Nozomu Hiraoka, Yoshihiko Takano, Yosuke Goto, Yoshikazu Mizuguchi Download PDF Abstract: High-entropy-alloy (HEA) superconductors are a new class of disordered