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In Reply to: I'm not sure your assertion is correct posted by Charles Hansen on April 14, 2007 at 18:29:51:
True cryo involves taking the material below a temperaure whiere its properties "flip" rapidly to a different state.This applies to metals undergoing treatment for physical properties - hardness etc.
There are lots of ambiguities w.r.t other materials, many not exhibiting a cryo flip.
I doubt whether anyone can scientificly predict the effect of sticking the whole of your CDP in the cooler. Hence the sujective "it sounds better" in the absence of anything else.
Follow Ups:
From what little I've found black and white, as in the transfer function of B&W film seems similar to this process. A flip would imply a positive feedback mechanism. Any chance you could point me to an on-line reference?
The implications is that a certain temperature needs to be reached before the effect is noticable, and that the change is permanent (ie not reversible).But this is an advert for their products!
At least it had pictures of copper. Most sites have about the same information but mostly focused on steel. Very likely the plot of temperature vs effect is an S curve and I wish I could find some data showing what it looks like. Oh well...
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