03-02-2025, 02:24 PM
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#11 (permalink)
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Human Environmentalist
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I explored the use of that material as robot actuators in the 90's, but they aren't efficient and have slow cycles because the relaxation part of the cycle depends on how quickly one can waste the heat.
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03-02-2025, 03:35 PM
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#12 (permalink)
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Does it take paint? 
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03-03-2025, 05:01 PM
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#13 (permalink)
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As for the idea of cheap durable body parts, the answer is neither nitinol nor what's currently used.
Sandy Munro predicts the future and it's kinda relevant to this use:
BTW fugeddabout paint 
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03-03-2025, 08:44 PM
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#14 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RedDevil
As for the idea of cheap durable body parts, the answer is neither nitinol nor what's currently used.
Sandy Munro predicts the future and it's kinda relevant to this use:
BTW fugeddabout paint 
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I believe nitinol is used in body parts, as stints for arteries.
This is the kind of Sandy content I enjoy, not him talking about Jigawatts.
I would fugeddabout paint, and the house altogether, but I prefer to remain married. If she's going to have me paint, I've got to get her to like something that won't turn the house into a gloomy cave.
That's a relevant efficiency topic, LRI (Light Reflectivity Index). It's the percent of light that a particular paint reflects rather than absorbs. Higher LRI make more efficient use of lighting since it bounces it around instead of absorbing it.
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03-03-2025, 11:13 PM
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#16 (permalink)
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Is CF frame damage repairable? At any rate, part of the reason to make a frame out of steel is to absorb energy, which rigid materials simply transfer to the occupants. I suppose one would create crumple areas out of steel and attach it to CF for things that don't require a crumple zone, like the roof and doors.
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03-04-2025, 12:39 AM
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#17 (permalink)
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Basalt fiber bends instead of shattering like carbon fiber. It's a composite so if the matrix (resin or whatever) is thermoplastic (multi-hundreds of degrees via microwave?) or disolvable it might be repairable.
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