Categories | Metal Coffin Handles |
---|---|
Brand Name: | B&R |
Model Number: | H001 |
Place of Origin: | China |
MOQ: | 1000pcs |
Price: | USD 3.75-4.25/pc |
Payment Terms: | T/T or L/C |
Supply Ability: | 20000pc/month |
Delivery Time: | 30days |
Packaging Details: | 48pcs/ctn, Caton Size: 50*23*24CM |
Color: | Antique bronze |
Other color: | Gold,Silver or antique copper |
Material: | zamak |
appilcation: | Coffin |
Usage: | Catholic,Christian or Orthodox |
size: | 25.8*7.4cm |
Main information:
Product name:ZAMAK COFFIN HANDLE
Model: H001
Brand: B&R
Application: European style coffin
Origin: China
Manufacturer: Sumer International (Beijing) Trading Co.,Ltd
Product detail:
Size: 25.8*8.4cm
Material: Zamak (Zinc alloy)
Color: Antique bronze
Other: Gold, Silver or antique copper (Optional)
Attached on coffin by bolt and nut
MOQ:1000 pcs
Packing: Carton
Main feature:
Professionally engaged in funeral field over 10 years;
Customized products acceptable;
Good quality and competitive price;
More Information:
Physical properties
Zinc is a bluish-white, lustrous, diamagnetic metal, though most
common commercial grades of the metal have a dull finish.It is
somewhat less dense than iron and has a hexagonal crystal
structure, with a distorted form of hexagonal close packing, in
which each atom has six nearest neighbors (at 265.9 pm) in its own
plane and six others at a greater distance of 290.6 pm. The metal
is hard and brittle at most temperatures but becomes malleable
between 100 and 150 °C. Above 210 °C, the metal becomes brittle
again and can be pulverized by beating. Zinc is a fair conductor of
electricity. For a metal, zinc has relatively low melting (419.5
°C) and boiling points (907 °C). The melting point is the lowest of
all the transition metalsaside from mercury and cadmium.
History
Ancient use
Late Roman brass bucket – the HemmoorerEimer from Warstade,
Germany, second to third century AD
Various isolated examples of the use of impure zinc in ancient
times have been discovered. Zinc ores were used to make the
zinc–copper alloybrass thousands of years prior to the discovery of
zinc as a separate element. Judean brass from the 14th to 10th
centuries BC contains 23% zinc.
Knowledge of how to produce brass spread to Ancient Greece by the
7th century BC, but few varieties were made. Ornaments made of
alloyscontaining 80–90% zinc, with lead, iron, antimony, and other
metals making up the remainder, have been found that are 2,500
years old.[18] A possibly prehistoric statuette containing 87.5%
zinc was found in a Dacian archaeological site.
Regions with significant populations
European Union | 373,656,000 |
United States | 246,790,000 |
Brazil | 175,770,000 |
Mexico | 107,780,000 |
Russia | 105,220,000 |
Philippines | 86,790,000 |
Nigeria | 80,510,000 |
China | 67,070,000 |
Democratic Republic of the Congo | 63,150,000 |
Ethiopia | 52,580,000 |
More Picture:
H001 zamak coffin handle antique bronze
Back look of H001 metal coffin handle
Zamak products