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metal used for space craft
is there any truth that the metal used for the first american space craft, was taken from sunken first world war ships, as since the first atomic test/bombs the available metal was not as strong
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Apparently so, I remember reading that metal was being taken from WWI wrecks at Jutland to make high sensitivity equipment for radiation monitoring, as they were sunk before any atomic tests and so have lower "inherent" radiation levels. These devices are sometimes used in space craft. So the reason is not strength of the metal, but low radiation.
I find that hard to believe. Surely, spacecraft are made of aluminium, titanium and such like, for weight reasons.
Secondly, freshly mined iron ore has been underground since long before any atomic testing, why would that not have a similar lack of radioactivity?
And don't the US have their own wrecks to plunder; why come all the way to steal ours? Isn't Jutland a war grave?
Secondly, freshly mined iron ore has been underground since long before any atomic testing, why would that not have a similar lack of radioactivity?
And don't the US have their own wrecks to plunder; why come all the way to steal ours? Isn't Jutland a war grave?
Sorry, Scapa flow, not Jutland. Only radiation monitoring equipment is made of it AFAIK.
http://www.viridiandesign.org/notes/251-300/00 270_hiding_the_garbage.html
http://www.viridiandesign.org/notes/251-300/00 270_hiding_the_garbage.html
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