The actual thickness associated with a "gauge range" varies largely by industry. Gauges are OK for ball-parking, but are not adequate for engineering purposes. Producing mills and reputable service centers work from actual measurements or minimum thicknesses.
Carbon Steel
yes you can use nickel on a ball mill yes you can use nickel on a ball mill
To calculate the weight of a given amount of steel in the metric system you simply multiply the volume of steel in cubic meters times the SG of steel (typically 7.85 but it varies slightly depending on the type of steel). The answer will be in metric tonnes or MT.
it is a mechanical equipment to reduce friction. It is used in moving parts very often.
No. A hollow steel ball will not crush underwater. One reason this is true is because the steel ball cant go under the water in the first place because it hallow.
Hockey
well you can get a hallow ball no holes attach a fuse fill the hallow ball with gun powder
The impression I got is that it is a big hallow glass ball.
Cheap ones are hallow
A steel ball is a ball, or sphere, made of steel. An example would be a ball bearing, and the whole world runs on bearings, many of which are of the ball bearing variety.
The actual thickness associated with a "gauge range" varies largely by industry. Gauges are OK for ball-parking, but are not adequate for engineering purposes. Producing mills and reputable service centers work from actual measurements or minimum thicknesses.
If you're trying to shoot through steel, then that'll depend on the thickness and density of the steel, as well as what you're shooting it with. For regular steel targets which you're not trying to shoot through, you typically use regular FMJ ball ammunition, and only fire loads recommended by the manufacturer for the specific target.
The concept of the gauge originated with pistols, and later shotguns. The gauge described the size of the barrel by the fraction of a pound of a round iron ball that just fits the barrel. For example, a 12 guage shotgun has a barrel that will just fit a round iron ball that is one twelfth of a pound. This measurement stemmed from cannon measurements, which measured the cannon by the size of the cannon ball it fired (such as a 6 pound cannon, or 20 pound cannon). There are different gauges that describe thickness, including the American Wire Gauge that measures the thickness (diameter) of electrical wire, US Steel Wire Gauge for steel wire, Sheet Metal Gauge, etc.
There's going to be a greater density in the bowling ball, because its ALOT heavier and isn't hallow like the balloon.
A steel ball is a ball, or sphere, made of steel. An example would be a ball bearing, and the whole world runs on bearings, many of which are of the ball bearing variety.
Ball park thickness for the sides of a drink can is about 0.25 millimeters.