harryjackson Posted January 14, 2023 Posted January 14, 2023 Waz up I’m a journeyman tool & die maker and the alloy I mostly work with is waukesha 88 and the local scrapyard isn’t taking it anymore My boss wants to throw the metal chips in the dumpster I told him I would take them but now they are piling up Tons of them I would like to extract the nickel out and found the MONDS PROCESS has anyone ever tried that at a diy level or is there a better way I know this site if full of very intellectual and intelligent free thinkers always outside the box Sort of wondering what all of you would do with tons of these metal chips lol ? Alloy 88 is known as Waukesha 88, its mostly made from nickel, but also includes tin, iron, bismuth and chromium materials. It solves the problem of galling of stainless steel materials, which are often used to combat corrosion-caused processing of aggressive foods and pharmaceuticals.
exchemist Posted January 14, 2023 Posted January 14, 2023 1 hour ago, harryjackson said: Waz up I’m a journeyman tool & die maker and the alloy I mostly work with is waukesha 88 and the local scrapyard isn’t taking it anymore My boss wants to throw the metal chips in the dumpster I told him I would take them but now they are piling up Tons of them I would like to extract the nickel out and found the MONDS PROCESS has anyone ever tried that at a diy level or is there a better way I know this site if full of very intellectual and intelligent free thinkers always outside the box Sort of wondering what all of you would do with tons of these metal chips lol ? Alloy 88 is known as Waukesha 88, its mostly made from nickel, but also includes tin, iron, bismuth and chromium materials. It solves the problem of galling of stainless steel materials, which are often used to combat corrosion-caused processing of aggressive foods and pharmaceuticals. Definitely a case of “Don’t try this at home”. Nickel carbonyl is appallingly dangerous to health and carbon monoxide, which you would need, is also pretty lethal.
John Cuthber Posted January 14, 2023 Posted January 14, 2023 I'd be surprised if you can't find some metal recycling place that's prepared to take it. Nickel is quite valuable. The Mond process just isn't something that works on a "home brew" scale.
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