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Re: mikeg2 post# 23820

Tuesday, 09/01/2015 8:09:57 PM

Tuesday, September 01, 2015 8:09:57 PM

Post# of 28677
Mike, An interesting connection can be made.

But first let anyone that chooses to contact Bourque Industries directly using the phone and Fax approach, once they are soon to be functional, to consider using a home Fax, or pay for use at a Staples store, to first submit a signed NDA (Non-Disclosure Agreement) prior to requesting answers to inquiries made about activity at Bourque Industries.

Also, For those that have acquired direct e-mail access to a Bourque Industries officer, one can receive an attachment, being a blank NDA form, print it, sign it, scan it and then return it to Bourque Industries.

I have not done this procedure, but it might afford one more feedback than not doing this. Perhaps even almost duplicate what can be obtained during an actual location visit, except of course tasting John Bourque's delicious krybq.

Reference: "... consider [Bourque Industries] producing shooting range targets [as] current ones available need constant replacement because the impact breaks the weld at the base plate."

The connection I make is not to make Kryron shooting range targets, but to address "the weld at the base plate" that breaks upon impact.

weld - a metal joint formed by softening with heat and fusing, or hammering together

I'm sure John Bourque has an excellent grasp on the many types of welding techniques, as I have none, but here I'm thinking that the method used for the shooting range targets has the heat applied between the metals of the target and supporting structure, and they fuse together directly. I'm now wondering if an electrode made of Kryron can be used and it provides itself as a filler material between the regular metals of the target and supporting structure.

If so, This would solve the problem if the Kryron filler resulted as a stronger bonding agent.

Since Kryron has already been proven (see below) for use as a plasma spray, I'm thinking that its already demostrated that high heat does not alter the properties of a Kryron alloy.

Date: 12/06/2011 (3 years 8 months ago)
Source : Business Wire
Bourque Industries Successfully Tests Proof of Concept (Plasma Spray Application)
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=50321848
Bourque Industries today announced that the Company successfully demonstrated a plasma spray application of a micro-meters thin layer of pure Kryron material onto a metallic surface Saturday at Controlled Thermal Technologies in Phoenix.

Years ago I wonered why this application never came to be. "If Kryron is for real and John Bourque could never get the price per plate at a market acceptable level, then marketing Kryron alloys for the plasma spray treatment would be marketable simply because a tiny fraction of the Kryron alloy is need per treatment, as compared to a hundred fold or more per armor plate."

BTW,
Here is a good explaination of a gutsy quote.


The posts contained on my (gotmilk) account are my own opinions and are not recommendations or advise to buy or sell any security, stocks or other investments. These posts are for entertainment purposes only and are not considered to be facts or truth.