Ebonite
This article details a type of plastic, for the manufacturer of bowling balls, see Ebonite International
Ebonite is a very hard rubber first obtained by Charles Goodyear by vulcanizing rubber for prolonged periods. It is about 30% to 40% sulfur. Its name comes from its intended use as an artificial substitute for ebony wood. Ebonite is a brand name — it is also known as vulcanite or hard rubber.
Applications
It is often used in bowling balls, smoking pipe mouthpieces, fountain pen bodies and nib feeds, and saxophone and clarinet mouthpieces. Hard rubber is also often seen as the wheel material in casters. It is also commonly used in physics classrooms to demonstrate static electricity. It was used as an insulating material in early electrical and electronic apparatus before bakelite.
Hard rubber was used in the cases of automobile batteries for years, thus establishing black as their traditional color even long after stronger modern plastics were substituted. It is used in hair combs made by Ace, which survive, essentially unchanged, from the days of the US Civil War.
Properties
The material is brittle, which produces problems in its use in battery cases for example, where the integrity of the case is vital to prevent leakage of sulfuric acid. It has now been generally replaced by carbon black-filled polypropylene.
Translation
The word "Ebonite" occurs as such in the following languages: English, Portuguese.
Translation(s) in other languages: Arabic: إبونيت, Czech: Ebonit, Danish: Ebonit, German: Ebonit, Spanish: Ebonita, French: Ébonite, Galician: Ebonita, Ido: Ebonito, Italian: Ebanite, Lithuanian: Ebonitas, Dutch: Eboniet, Japanese: エボナイト, Norwegian (Bokmål): Ebonitt, Polish: Ebonit, Russian: Эбонит, Finnish: Eboniitti, Swedish: Ebonit, Chinese: 硬膠.
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