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stainless steel do not turn black. anything black in them is removable. After cleaning they are good as new. Stainless steel, as its name implies, does not stain or oxidize. If you have a utensil that is turning black, it might very well be silver or silver plated. Silver does durn black or tarnish as it oxidizes. If you are certain the item is stainless, something is going on that is out of the ordinary.
D. hammering it into a new shape
All stainless steel cooking pots do discolor but you can keep them looking shiny and new with a cheap cleanser called The Barkeeper's Friend.Yes, it is common for stainless steel cooking pots to discolor from the heat.
Mitosis
what caused the steelmaking industry to boom and why? The steel-making industry boomed mainly because of a new manufacturing technique called the Bessemer steel process. this allowed steel to be produced at a much faster pace allowing the industry to boom. :)
Nothing new after the Kama Sutra!
what caused the steelmaking industry to boom and why? The steel-making industry boomed mainly because of a new manufacturing technique called the Bessemer steel process. this allowed steel to be produced at a much faster pace allowing the industry to boom. :)
henry bessmer
Lovely Raku Pottery Vase is ready for the market. Let’s see, where, this beautiful vase will find a new home. Raku Pottery is a fire technique of making ceramics products.
There is no secret ingredient in my recipe. I have a secret technique for making it.The new technique would take hours off the workload time.All the workers needed to learn the same technique so all the hand-made products looked the same.
please somebody help his guy
The bessemer process and the open-heart process
Ferronickel is an alloy of iron and nickel. It is produced mostly in Japan, New Caledonia, and Colombia. It is often used in making stainless steel and heat resistant steel.
No.
Steel was important to the industrial revolution because it was a major tool used to make many of the new inventions and it contributed to the making of railroads. That was why there were so many steel industries in the late 1800's and early 1900's.
Eric Burdon, the lead singer, is still touring. Up until 2008, he toured with "Erick Burdon and the New Animals" as a way to trade on the legendary name. It is peculiar that the drummer, John Steel, owns the name rights. There have been legal complications, but the short version is that John Steel and Eric Burdon are both trying to use the original band's name to get on tour. They are not making new music, working as a nostalgia band. Both men are still active and touring in England.