Re: Cooking Composites?
From: Joel M. Eichen, D.D.S. (joeleichen_at_yahoo.com)
Date: 06/27/04
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Date: Sun, 27 Jun 2004 07:32:06 -0400
It is highly recommended in Juneau, Alaska. Especially during this
heating oil crisis .........
JOEL
On Sun, 27 Jun 2004 04:46:21 GMT, ADay@the.Races (StovePipe) wrote:
>Howdy all.
>
>As you may or may not know, there's an election here in Kanada on
>Monday. We get to choose among a monkey, a donkey, a mole and an
>ostritch. I just heard the Marijuana Party platform on the CBC as free
>time political announcement. Yes, there really is a Marijuana Party here
>in igloo land.
>
>That got me thinking (don't ask me why...) about the advert I saw in
>Dentsitry Today for a kind of heater for composites: You load your gun
>with a compule and stick it in this hole in the appliance and it gets
>heated to 130 deg Faranheit. The claim is that the adaptation and
>workability are better, and it shortens the curing time.
>
>When I saw Jeff Brucia at the ODQ symposium in May, he didn't mention
>this at all. When I saw Karl Leinfelter a couple of years ago, however,
>he did say that the layer of flowable composite could be replaced by
>heated composite. So, I'd like to know:
>
>Has anyone tried this? Is there any advantage to placing heated
>composites vs cold? Most importantly, does it alter the physical
>properties significantly?
>10-Q for your thoughts.
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