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thermoplastic Two basic types of plastic resins. Thermoplastics are resins that can be reground after molding, and molded again. Thermosets can be molded once only; they tend to be denser materials for special purposes. PVC is a thermoplastic. A PVC valve could conceivably be reground, then molded into a coffee mug. The resin used on a solenoid coil is a thermoset. A good analogy is paraffin wax vs. ...
Ãâó: www.plastomatic.com/glossary.html
thermoplastic A polymer which melts or flows when heated. Thermoplastic polymers are usually not highly cross-linked, and act much like molecular solids: low melting and boiling points, high ductile strength.
Ãâó: www.npd-solutions.com/injectmoldglos.html
thermoplastic a type of polymer that can be melted and reformed by application of heat.
Ãâó: www.cue-inc.com/urethane-technical/urethane-glossa...
thermoplastic A resin or plastic compound that, as a finished material, is capable of being repeatedly softened by heating and hardened by cooling. Examples of thermoplastics are: acetal, acrylic, cellulosic, chlorinated polyether, fluorocarbons, polyamides (nylons), polycarbonate, polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene, some types of polyurethanes, and vinyl resins.
Ãâó: www.jmcatalysts.com/pct/marketshome.asp
thermoplastic Widely used materials, such as ABS, acrylic, polycarbonate and PVC, which can be melted again and again. They melt when heated to a certain temperature, but harden again as they cool.
Ãâó: www.eupen.com/glossary/glossarypipe.html
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