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Blog entry by Vito Steinberger

Nine Reasons To Love The New Tungsten Wedding

Nine Reasons To Love The New Tungsten Wedding

Standing over Hope Cement Works in the dark3. The Advanced Manufacturing Process of Powder Metallurgy

The creation of a tungsten carbide ring is an engineering feat that diverges entirely from the traditional jewelry-making methods of casting or forging soft metals like gold and silver. Because tungsten wedding carbide has an impractically high melting point, far exceeding that of a standard jeweler's torch, it cannot be melted and poured into a mold. Instead, the process relies on a highly specialized technique known as Powder Metallurgy or sintering. The journey begins with ultra-fine tungsten metal and carbon powders, which are meticulously measured and blended, often with a nickel binder, to ensure a uniform composition. This composite powder is then poured into high-pressure steel dies in the basic cylindrical shape of the desired ring and subjected to immense hydraulic pressure, compressing the powder into a highly dense, yet still brittle, "green state" ring blank. The crucial next step is sintering, where the compacted blank is fired in a vacuum furnace at temperatures exceeding 6,000 degrees Fahrenheit. This intense, oxygen-free heat causes the binder metal to liquefy and flow around the solid carbide particles, fusing them together and creating the final, solid, non-porous tungsten carbide structure. This thermal process also results in significant shrinkage, often up to twenty percent. Once the ultra-hard blank is cooled, it must be cut, shaped, and polished using only diamond-coated tools and abrasives. Because no standard metal tool can affect tungsten carbide's surface, the shaping is akin to cutting a rough diamond, requiring high-power lasers and precision grinding to achieve the final dimensions and mirror-like finish, ultimately underscoring the high-tech, intricate nature of its construction.

gold-faceted-tungsten-carbdie-ring-6mm.pngGold Mercury Tungsten Carbide Ring 6mm - Carbide CUSTOM MADE Engraved Men Women | Tungsten Wedding

rasoret7mm.jpgRasoret 7mm Tungsten Carbide Ring - Carbide CUSTOM MADE Engraved Men Women | Tungsten Wedding

3. The Advanced Manufacturing Process of Powder Metallurgy

The creation of a tungsten wedding carbide ring is an engineering feat that diverges entirely from the traditional jewelry-making methods of casting or forging soft metals like gold and silver. Because tungsten carbide has an impractically high melting point, far exceeding that of a standard jeweler's torch, it cannot be melted and poured into a mold. Instead, the process relies on a highly specialized technique known as Powder Metallurgy or sintering. The journey begins with ultra-fine tungsten metal and carbon powders, which are meticulously measured and blended, often with a nickel binder, to ensure a uniform composition. This composite powder is then poured into high-pressure steel dies in the basic cylindrical shape of the desired ring and subjected to immense hydraulic pressure, compressing the powder into a highly dense, yet still brittle, "green state" ring blank. The crucial next step is sintering, where the compacted blank is fired in a vacuum furnace at temperatures exceeding 6,000 degrees Fahrenheit. This intense, oxygen-free heat causes the binder metal to liquefy and flow around the solid carbide particles, fusing them together and creating the final, solid, non-porous tungsten carbide structure. This thermal process also results in significant shrinkage, often up to twenty percent. Once the ultra-hard blank is cooled, it must be cut, shaped, and polished using only diamond-coated tools and abrasives. Because no standard metal tool can affect tungsten carbide's surface, the shaping is akin to cutting a rough diamond, requiring high-power lasers and precision grinding to achieve the final dimensions and mirror-like finish, ultimately underscoring the high-tech, intricate nature of its construction.

tungsten polished rings

tungsten lord of rings

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