Calling all geeks
Back in the late 60s a local bank was giving away key chains. Pretty ordinary with a big "gold" oval fob with the banks logo on it (It may have been Lincoln Savings & Loan).
I happened to discover something interesting about the fob. It was *para*magnetic. That is, it was attracted by magnets, but only weakly. Very strange.
Whatever the fob was made of it was solid, not plated (I used a file on one edge). It got lost many years ago but I've always wondered just *what* that alloy was.
I'm hoping one of my fellow geeks might know.
Blitzkreig!
(tanks in advance :-)
I happened to discover something interesting about the fob. It was *para*magnetic. That is, it was attracted by magnets, but only weakly. Very strange.
Whatever the fob was made of it was solid, not plated (I used a file on one edge). It got lost many years ago but I've always wondered just *what* that alloy was.
I'm hoping one of my fellow geeks might know.
Blitzkreig!
(tanks in advance :-)
no subject
I suspect then it was probably a Copper/niobium alloy. Copper by itself isn't magnetic, and niobium is too reactive to oxygen, but an alloy of both is the only non-oxidising gold-coloured alloy with paramagnetic properties I can find,
Also, it's dirt cheap.
no subject