The latest blanks are the same color, hardness and tone as a regular brown wax 
Edison Blanks. I have more precision equipment, a digital themometer and an 
ohuas laboratoy balance down to a hundreth of a gram, for more batch 
consistancy. The changes in color of brown blanks have nothing to do with 
ingrediants, Edison blanks were the same basic formula, from 1889 to the advent 
of four minute black blanks about 1912. Color has to do with how long the batch 
is cooked, all batches start out light and go darker.  I have a preheat now 
that make bubbles a thing of the past, and consistancy throughot the thickness. 
                                          
_______________________________________________
Phono-L mailing list
http://phono-l.oldcrank.org

Reply via email to