When was made When in when. hehheheheh
cell made a group and made a tissue and tissue together and made a musle
pyrite is made of FeS2
It can be made from natural or man made fibres.
Sugars are made by chloroplasts.Not made by vacuols.
Hot Wheels and other diecast vehicles are made from a compound called ZAMAC which is a family of alloys with a base metal of zinc and alloying elements of aluminium, magnesium, and copper.
Between 300€ and 500€ depending on whether this radio has the fm stereo decoder or not. Note that many of these radios have the "zamac" syndrom so that means that if you are lucky, you will get a model with one of the mecanical components which is made of Zamac which deteriorates with age and renders the radio useless (you won't be to switch bands anymore)... It happened with one of my 5490 radios. So be very very carefull and check the radio before buying it.
Most metal (diecast) toy cars are made of a product called ZAMAC or ZAMAKThe bodies and chassis of the cars were actually made of *ZAMAK (German) "zink, aluminium, magnesium and kupfer", also known as Zamac (US) "zinc, aluminum, magnesium and copper". The New Jersey Zinc Company developed zamak alloys in 1929. Zamak has also been referred to over the years as pot metal or white metal. The most common zamak alloy is "zamak 3", but "zamak 2", ""zamak 5 and "zamak 7" are still commercially used. These alloys are most commonly used for die cast. Zamak alloys (particularly #3 and #5) are frequently used in the spin casting industry.Some toy cars have also been made of tin and plastic.
What you describe does not exist. The Model 647 is chambered in 17HMR. **** Correct! The S&W you are looking for is a zink (Zamac) cast Model Gun made in the 1980s by DENIX, Spain and imitates a S&W M29 cal.44Mag 8inch. For pictures of it contact buickray@yahoo.com.
Hot Wheels cars tracks are made of plastic. A vinyl kind of plastic. Edited.... It's actually polyethylene…. a mixture of *LDPE and *HDPE. Not sure if it's changed in formula over the years. *LDPE: Low Density Polyethylene *HDPE: High Density Polyethylene
If it is a metal or diecast car....The bodies and chassis of the cars were actually made of *ZAMAK (German) "zink, aluminium, magnesium and kupfer", also known as Zamac (US) "zinc, aluminum, magnesium and copper". The New Jersey Zinc Company developed zamak alloys in 1929. Zamak has also been referred to over the years as pot metal or white metal. The most common zamak alloy is "zamak 3", but "zamak 2", ""zamak 5 and "zamak 7" are still commercially used. These alloys are most commonly used for die cast. Zamak alloys (particularly #3 and #5) are frequently used in the spin casting industry.Some toy cars have also been made of tin and plastic.
You're saying that there are absolutely no marks, letters, words, or numbers anywhere on this Frontier Scout? There are two possiblities. One, an employee at Colt stole the pieces one by one before any marks were put on them ( barrel and frame in particular). Two, someone did a really bad job trying to refinish it. The frame was made either of aluminum or a zinc alloy called "Zamac" IIRC. Either way, it's a very bad thing and illegal to have.
Frontier Scouts with a Q suffix had an alloy frame and were produced from 1957-58. Some came with an extra cylinder. Frontier Scouts with the K suffix where produced from 1960-1970. They were a Zamac alloy frame version of the "Q" Model. IIRC, they did not have the option of an extra cylinder. COLT SCOUTS, PEACEMAKERS, AND NEW FRONTIERS IN .22 CALIBER by Don Wilkerson is a good book to have if you own one.
The bodies and chassis of most of the metal toy cars today are actually made of *ZAMAK (German) "zink, aluminium, magnesium and kupfer", also known as Zamac (US) "zinc, aluminum, magnesium and copper". The New Jersey Zinc Company developed zamak alloys in 1929. Zamak has also been referred to over the years as pot metal or white metal. The most common zamak alloy is "zamak 3", but "zamak 2", ""zamak 5 and "zamak 7" are still commercially used. These alloys are most commonly used for die cast. Zamak alloys (particularly #3 and #5) are frequently used in the spin casting industry. *(taken from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)Read more: What_a_toy_car_is_made_from
If it is a metal toy car it is most likely made of ZAMAK or ZAMAC.The bodies and chassis of the cars were actually made of *ZAMAK (German) "zink, aluminium, magnesium and kupfer", also known as Zamac (US) "zinc, aluminum, magnesium and copper". The New Jersey Zinc Company developed zamak alloys in 1929. Zamak has also been referred to over the years as pot metal or white metal. The most common zamak alloy is "zamak 3", but "zamak 2", ""zamak 5 and "zamak 7" are still commercially used. These alloys are most commonly used for die cast. Zamak alloys (particularly #3 and #5) are frequently used in the spin casting industry. *(taken from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
Made
"Made of" and "Made from" can mean the same thing. "That can is made from aluminum." "That can is made of aluminum." However, they can't be used the same in every situation. You can say: "That house is made of wood and made from workers." But you can't say: "That house is made of workers and made from wood."