I doupt you can x ray lead. It is used as a shield for x ray...
What do you want to acheive ? Unless you have a really BIG stack of all the same type - it’s useless.
I doubt you can x ray lead. It is used as a shield for x ray...
What do you want to achieve ? Unless you have a really BIG stack of all the same type - it’s useless.
If a lead suit could protect superman from Kryptonite I doubt one could X-ray (lead) for flaws.....
Rob
1. Allen's ingot.
2. Odds & ends lead
3. Mystery 50/50
4.Berts ingot
Sample #1
Pb = 0%
Sb = 3.9%
Sn = 90.1%
Cu = 6.0%
Sample #2
Pb = 93.0%
Sb = 3.7%
Sn = 3.3%
Sample #3
Pb = 94.4%
Sb = 4.4%
Sn = 1.2%
Sample #4
Pb = 95.3%
Sb = 2.6%
Sn = 2.1%
View attachment 296738
It's not a traditional x ray. It is likely one of these from Thermo Scientific. My buddy has one for use in his scrap yard. His model was $30,000 a few years back. Point and shoot and you get a very accurate reading instantly. A few years back we bought it to test gold and platinum group metals we recovered and refined. All from gold and platinum bearing scrap collected over 40+ years. Old school General Electric CNC machines were literally gold mines. Made a god damn fortune...$$$
I cant remember what nuclear element it uses, but its nasty enough to penetrate lead and has to be licensed with the Nuclear Safety Commission of Canada.
Yup!....hence my link
JC5
Pb = 95.7%
Sb = 1.7%
Sn = 2.6%
JC1
Pb = 94.3%
Sb = 3.3%
Sn = 2.4%
EM
Pb = 92.8%
Sb = 2.6%
Sn = 4.0%
Zn = 0.6%