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Trash bins
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US Mail palettes
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Shipping palettes
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Bumper recycling
We pick up free larger
quantities of car bumpers in Southern California.
Like to drop it at our
recycling location? Please contact us by phone or email.
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Material
wanted -
High
Pressure Laminate
High Pressure Laminate Called As Formica Product Description.
Thickness: Generally 0.5-25mm, surface finishing, matte, texture,
embossing, glossy
freerecycling.com, LLC seeks uncommon
and traditionally hard-to-sell items. We collect large volume of
post production
Formica, minimum shipment is truckload or container load. This
is an ongoing long term business for many years.
Please e-mail offer to:
Alwin Morgenstern, MS COO
E-Mail:
mail@freerecycling.com
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| We are looking
for large volume of trash bins, palettes and US Mail palettes for
recycling and grinding. Please offer free delivery Southern California.
We have more than 5 million pounds grinding capacity per month.
Please e-mail offer to:
Alwin Morgenstern, MS COO
E-Mail:
mail@freerecycling.com |
Formica
is a brand of composite materials
manufactured. In common use, the term refers to the company's classic
product, a heat-resistant, wipe-clean, plastic laminate of paper or
fabric with melamine resin.
Formica was invented in 1912 by Daniel J. O'Conor and Herbert A. Faber,
then working at Westinghouse. They originally conceived it as an
electrical insulator as a substitute for micarta, hence the name they
chose when they left Westinghouse to set up their own company in 1913.
Formica being an abbreviation of "formerly micarta"
In its early years, Formica manufactured insulation along with other
products such as phenolic composite gears, developing its classic range
of surfacing laminates from the late 1920s. During World War II it
manufactured plastic-impregnated wooden airplane propellers. Post-war,
engineering uses declined, ceasing in 1970 in favor of decorative
laminates. It is composed of many layers of resin-impregnated kraft
paper and topped with a decorative layer protected by melamine, then
compressed and cured with heat to make a hard, durable surface. |
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