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Martin H. Eastburn Martin H. Eastburn is offline
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Default How to take the metal pin out

I suspect the peacock colors in leaded glass is from an HCL wash.
Thanks Ed.

Martin

Martin H. Eastburn
@ home at Lions' Lair with our computer lionslair at consolidated dot net
TSRA, Life; NRA LOH & Patron Member, Golden Eagle, Patriot's Medal.
NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder
IHMSA and NRA Metallic Silhouette maker & member.
http://lufkinced.com/


Ed Huntress wrote:
"Ed Huntress" wrote in message
...
wrote in message
oups.com...
On Nov 3, 9:41?pm, "Ed Huntress" wrote:
"Harold and Susan Vordos" wrote in
ws.tds.net...







"Gerry" wrote in message
ps.com...
On Nov 3, 1:48 pm, wrote:
I have a metal pin look like this
| \
=====\
| /
It is attached to glass panel
| glass
|====\ glass
| glass
I need to take the pin out. The flat part of the pin has
dimension of 5/16 inch. The pin attached to a glass panel. I bought
a
1/8" titanium bit and drilled the pin hopefully to break it apart.
The drill bit just made a scratch on the pin but does not penetrate.
How should I take it out without breaking the glass panel ?
Thanks,
Nick
I'd try nitric acid
Acid would be good, but nitric isn't all that good of a choice.
Hydrochloric will dissolve steel readily, and is inexpensive and
readily
available, unlike nitric. Sulfuric would do the job, too. Be
sure
to keep it submerged adequately, not only for cooling, but for keeping
a
fresh supply of acid at the work. Give the acid plenty of time to
get
the job done. HCl will actually work quite fast, thus the concern
about
heating.
Wear eye, skin and lung protection when working with these
acids------and
remember that the gas coming off will be hydrogen-----so do this where
there is adequate ventilation, and there's nothing that will be ruined
by
rusting. If you do this operation inside, where there are iron
surfaces,
you can expect all of them to be damaged by the fumes.
Harold
Are you sure that hydrochloric acid doesn't etch glass? I thought it
did,
but my memory could be playing tricks.

--
Ed Huntress- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -
You're thinking of hydroflouric acid (HF) not hydrochloric (HCL).
They're in the same family but HF is much more potent.
Engineman

Yeah, I know that hydrofluoric is used for decorative etching, but I
thought that hydrochloric also etches glass, or at least frosts it. I'll
have to look it up and see if my memory is failing me.


It appears that hydrochloric reacts noticeably with some glasses but not
others. It will leach out metallic ions from several types of glass, leaving
a lightly etched, often irridescent surface on the glass.

--
Ed Huntress



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