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In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, J. Teske <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes >It is usually chrome steel and some brands even plug that into their >trade name e.g. "chromecore". Some will be coated with other metals >notably gold...extremely thin gold...since the cost differential >between coated and non coated is rather small. I don't know if chrome >steel is considered to be part of the stainless family. Chrome is the usual main ingredient of corrosion resistant steels, though many others (mostly more expensive) have a similar effect. The classical "stainless" steel, known as "18/8", has 18% chromium and 8% nickel. In my brief experience of metallurgy, "stainless" was a term not often used; in the context of steel structures, we discussed the somewhat larger class of "alloy" steels, most of which are corrosion resistant. These contain also manganese, cobalt, vanadium, tungsten and molybdenum. AFAIK they all have higher tensile strength than mild steels, which matters in the context of violin strings; I would not be surprised to learn that E-string steel contained nickel (which is more abundant than chromium). I like the idea of gold plating. Gold is even more resistant to corrosion by most reagents than even the best alloy steels and its high (19.3) density makes a positive (albeit minimal, because the layer will be very thin) contribution to the acoustic characteristics of the string. For the same reason, I would expect silver (density 10.5) wound strings to sound marginally better than aluminium (2.7) ones. Does anyone offer carbon fibre cores for wound strings? >I do know that >never in my violinistic career have I ever had a steel string rust. (I >only use steel strings for my E string.) All the others are synthetic >core. -- Ken Moore [EMAIL PROTECTED] pg composition student, University of Reading
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