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Surface Protection Study for Navy Projectiles | 
enlarge | Publisher: Storming Media Category: Book
Buy New: $35.95
Media: Spiral-bound Pages: 127
ISBN: 1423572769 EAN: 9781423572763 ASIN: 1423572769
Publication Date: 1997 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Please note that this is a report or document and is not a book, per se. It is 127 pages long and is Velobound in a soft linen cover. This technical report was sponsored by the Pentagon and is provided in the best form available to the government. Sometimes our report quality is picture perfect and in color; other times, particularly for older reports, extensive black-and-white photocopying has degraded the quality. If you have any questions about quality of a particular report, please ask and we would be happy to describe it in more detail.
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Product Description This is a NAVAL SURFACE WARFARE CENTER DAHLGREN DIV VA report procured by the Pentagon and made available for public release. It has been reproduced in the best form available to the Pentagon. It is not spiral-bound, but rather assembled with Velobinding in a soft, white linen cover. The Storming Media report number is A954053. The abstract provided by the Pentagon follows: This report documents the testing and evaluation of various organic and inorganic surface coatings exposed to marine environments. Results from a comparative series of qualitative performance tests are presented with emphasis on paint primers, and primers plus topcoat. Both laboratory and field testing of an accelerated nature were done on steel substrates with the selected coatings. Test specimens included both coupons and end items that consisted of Navy, gun- fired projectiles. The coatings examined included three types of powder coatings (epoxy, polyester, and nylon), an electrodeposited epoxy, a metallic-ceramic, an aluminized-phenolic, an inorganic zinc, a two-part epoxy, a silicon-oxide, and an alxyd paint system as control. The main purpose was to identify surface coatings with improved corrosion resistance, abrasion resistance, and better compliance to environmental standards, than the present paint system used on Navy ammunition components. The use of trade names and manufacturers' names in this report constitutes neither endorsement nor disapproval of any commercial entity.
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