yes nylon is very flammable becasue it is made up of all different flammable properties. lol N - nylon Y - yes L - lovely O - old N - nylon ................................ IS FREAKY FLAMMABLE
Since you are comparing the same materials more D equals more strength so 1800D nylon is stronger than 600D
Of course, Nylon is a thermoplastic and can be reground to pellet size and re-processed. Similar to any thermoplastic. The main issues with Nylon are the fact that there are so many nylon materials, Nylon 6, Nylon 66, Nylon 11, Nylon 6/12, Nylon 12 and so on. In the case of Polyethylene there are only a few options Low density, Medium density, High density as well as UHMW, and the applications are very limiting. Therefore the Nylon issue is more troubling. What we use for carpet and cloths is much more dynamic when it comes to Nylon. The real answer will come from a few questions: do you have enough of one single product to recycle and is it clothing or is the product of a more rigid standard like an automotive intake manifold. The last question is what color is the product and if there is more than one the only color they would be able to make from the multi colored materials is Black.
The dog has a nylon leash.
nylon is about as strong as a spider's silk
yes, indeed Nylon is. Nylon is a substance or substances of negative balance and can only ever be Organic because of the elements inside the Nylon it's self.
Rayon is more flammable than nylon. That is as long as the item is made from 100 percent nylon. Silk, and wool are also less flammable than rayon.
Nylon is a terrible heat insulator, so no.
A penny is made of metal, so is not flammable.
Is there any difference? nylon 6 and nylon 66 they are both nylon so...
It is absorbent, so i'm not sure it would be flammable as well. :)
Nylon is a synthetic, or man-made material, so you don't 'find' it.
No, Elmer's is not flammable. Well, less so when it's wet. Once dry, it's about as flammable as wood.
Insulin is peptide hormone, and is moderately reduced, so theoretically, it is flammable.
Nylon is a polyamide. There are two: nylon 6.6, which was invented by DuPont, and nylon 6, which was invented by BASF. DuPont had a patent on nylon 6.6 and wouldn't license it; BASF wanted to play in the polyamides market so they created a similar material using a different process. Of the two, nylon 6.6 has a higher melt point and is a little harder than nylon 6. Nylon 6.6 is a polymer of Hexamethylene diamine and Adipic acid (Hexadioic acid) both these compounds contain 6 carbon atoms each. so it is Nylon 6.6. (Which is true for nylon 6.6. Nylon 6 is polymerized caprolactam, so that's called Nylon 6 because caprolactam also has 6 carbon atoms.)
because toilet paper is so thin and is layered to where it has places for air to get in to where it is very flammable
Nylon is manufactured, so it is made in most countries, and there are several types.
Nylon is very cheap to make so therefore it is a lot cheaper to buy.