Chemical Progress - C&EN Global Enterprise (ACS Publications)

Nov 5, 2010 - Publication Date: October 17, 1949. Copyright © 1949 AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY. ACS Chem. Eng. News Archives. First Page Image...
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GENERALS ELECTRIC

$&%άζι£,7%0γΐβ*ίNews of developments from General Electric's Chemical Department that can be important to your business.

G-E Silicone Oil does t h r e e - w a y job in d e n t a l sterilizer

Newdevelopmentincreases e n e r g y output of G-E magnets A new development in the continu­ ing program of metallurgical devel­ opment and research at General Electric—the alignment of internal crystal structure in the direction of magnetic force—has resulted in the greatest size-for-size energy output yet known in the famous General Electric Alnico permanent magnet series. Known as Alnico 5 DG, this magnetic material is available on a production-line basis. Write for details.

A silicone oil that simultaneously cleans, sterilizes, and lubricates dental handpieces has just been an­ nounced by General Electric. Al­ ready being put to use in dental offices, silicone oils eliminate the l o n g - s t a n d i n g problem of fumes often emitted by conventional oils. Non-volatile, non-oxidizing silicone oils retain original qualities indefi­ nitely—eliminate frequent replace­ ment. Write for details.

Low-cost camera flash unit t r a n s f e r molded b y G.E. General Electric chemical progress was the answer for solving the prob­ lem of molding a low-priced, large volume camera flash unit. Labora­ tory-compiled data enabled G-E en­ gineers to quickly select the proper materials and methods to come up with a market-sure price for this consumer unit. Write for details.

tration of permeable materials, and excellent electrical properties. What­ ever your electrical requirements— there's a G-E resin or varnish to meet it. Write for details.

Silicone rubber helps reduce small transformer cost

G.E. n o w offers complete line of Phenolic Varnishes a n d Resins A versatile line of phenolic varnishes and liquid resins is now manufac­ tured by General Electric. Qualitycontrolled from start to finish they have a wide assortment of properties —physical strength and surface hard­ ness, resistance to weather, water, heat, and chemicals, thorough pene­

Self-sealing General Electric Sili­ cone rubber bushings for a small in­ put transformer are u s e d b y the Raytheon Manufacturing Company. Under exacting service conditions, these bushings are elastic over wide temperature ranges (—55 F to 520 F ) , they absorb shocks that would shatter glass, show no tracking char­ acteristics, and reduce cost per ter­ minal. Write for details. WANT MORE INFORMATION?

If you'd like more information on any Chemical Department products, just drop us a line. Address: Chem­ ical Department, General Electric Company, 1 Plastics Ave., Pittsfield 5, Massachusetts.

G-E chemical plants at: Pittsfield, Mass., Schenectady, N. Y., Waterford, N. Y., Coshocton. Ohio, Decatur, 111., Taunton, Mass., Anaheim, Calif.

GENERAL

ELECTRIC

PLASTICS COMPOUNDS • SILICONES • INSULATIONS • GLYPTAL ALKYD RESINS • PLASTICS LAMINATING AND MOLDING • PERMANENT MAGNETS

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