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  2. Nitrocellulose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrocellulose

    Nitrocellulose lacquers have been used as a finish on furniture and musical instruments. [7] Guncotton, dissolved at about 25% in acetone, forms a lacquer used in preliminary stages of wood finishing to develop a hard finish with a deep lustre. [8] It is normally the first coat applied, then it is sanded and followed by other coatings that bond ...

  3. Lacquer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lacquer

    Lacquer mixed with water and turpentine, ready for applying to surface. Types of lacquer vary from place to place but they can be divided into unprocessed and processed categories. The basic unprocessed lacquer is called raw lacquer (生漆: ki-urushi in Japanese, shengqi in Chinese). This is directly from the tree itself with some impurities ...

  4. Visco fuse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visco_fuse

    There are three external layers to visco fuse. First, a layer of string is wound around the core, then a second, less tight, layer of string is wound in the opposite direction to prevent unraveling. The last layer is a low-nitrate nitrocellulose lacquer that keeps the fuse from falling apart. The last layer helps to make the visco fuse water ...

  5. Duco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duco

    Duco was a trade name assigned to a product line of automotive lacquer developed by the DuPont Company in the 1920s. Under the Duco brand, DuPont introduced the first quick drying multi-color line of nitrocellulose lacquers made especially for the automotive industry. [1] It was also used in paintings by American artist Jackson Pollock.

  6. Film base - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film_base

    Nitrocellulose is guncotton, the first replacement propellant for gun powder in firearms. A can of decomposing nitrate film Film stock with a nitrate base was the first transparent flexible plasticized base commercially available, thanks to celluloid developments by John Carbutt , Hannibal Goodwin , and Eastman Kodak in the 1880s.

  7. Guitar pickup potting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guitar_Pickup_Potting

    A guitar pickup being potted in a wax mixture at approximately 140°F. Guitar pickup potting is a process whereby the fine wire coils of a guitar pickup are encapsulated in a substance that inhibits movement of the coil. [1]