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gettin2dizzy
15-08-08, 02:01 PM
I remember an episode where a man had invented a heat-proof paint. He coated an egg in it, took a blowtorch and 'toasted' the egg for a minute. He then cracked it open and it was still cold and runny!
Starlite it was called. What the hell happened to this stuff?!

gettin2dizzy
15-08-08, 02:04 PM
Hmmm. I found this.:

In April 1993, the defence magazine Jane's International Defence Review announced the discovery by a British amateur inventor, Maurice Ward, of a thin plastic coating able to withstand temperatures of 2,700 degrees Centigrade

The reason why it was a defence magazine who first published news of This revolutionary invention is that the coating is so resistant to heat that it can make tanks, ships and aircraft impervious to the effects of nuclear weapons at quite close range -- and hence is of great interest to the military mind.

A little later that year the whole nation had an opportunity to see for themselves the effectiveness of Maurice Ward's new paint on BBC Television when it was featured on "Tomorrow's World". Presenter Michael Rodd showed viewers an ordinary chicken's egg that had been painted with the new coating. The paint was so thin it was not visible. Rodd then dramatically donned welder's visor and gauntlets, lit up an oxyacetylene torch, and played the flame directly onto the egg for several minutes.

When he removed the flame, and cracked the egg on the table top, viewers were able to see that the coating was so heat resistant that the egg was still raw and had not even begun to cook.

This invention, a simple paint that can render anything impervious to very high temperatures, has been the holy grail of chemical research for more than fifty years. Teams of scientists in the world's greatest industrial and defence laboratories have poured billions of pounds and hundreds of man-years into the search for such a substance -- a quest which made Ward's discovery even more extraordinary.

Ward's invention is remarkable enough, but the story of how he came to make it, and the resistance he encountered in getting anyone to believe him, is even more remarkable.

Maurice Ward comes from Blackburn and has no professional scientific background. The closest he has come to the chemical industry was when, as a young man, he drove a fork lift truck in the warehouse of ICI. For the past two decades, he has earned a living as a ladies hairdresser.

Part of his income was derived from selling his customers hair preparations such as shampoo, conditioner and hairspray. To maximise his income he rented a small workshop, bought standard chemicals and mixed and bottled his own brand hair products.

In the best traditions of Ealing Comedy, it was when playing around mixing up chemicals in his 'skunk works' that Ward stumbled on the formula that had eluded the finest minds in chemical research.

Realising at once the value of his invention, Ward wrote to Britain's major chemical companies, offering to demonstrate his material to them. Every one sent him the standard brush-off letter they send to cranks and crackpots. After the "Tomorrow's World" demonstration, Ward stopped getting the brush-off and starting getting offers instead.

One consequence of his contacts with chemical companies was that the head of research of ICI's paint laboratory left the firm and went into partnership with Ward to exploit the discovery commercially.

DarrenSV650S
15-08-08, 02:12 PM
Interesting

Viney
15-08-08, 02:15 PM
The paint is used, mainly on the inside of McDonalds apple pies to keep the heat in!

Grinch
15-08-08, 02:16 PM
So why haven't I seen more of this, or is it one of those urban myths?

gettin2dizzy
15-08-08, 02:16 PM
Interesting
There's more here.

http://itotd.com/articles/653/starlite/

So why haven't I seen more of this, or is it one of those urban myths?

Apparently not. Every engineer/scientist who witnessed it confirms the stuff.

keithd
15-08-08, 02:20 PM
Interesting

Really?:confused:

Grinch
15-08-08, 02:27 PM
When I see space ships re-entering the earth with it coated on the bottom then I might think its true.

injury_ian
15-08-08, 02:44 PM
Did he not coat his hands in it and 'flame' his hands too?

gettin2dizzy
15-08-08, 02:59 PM
Did he not coat his hands in it and 'flame' his hands too?
Nope. Just the egg.

Considering what's on the net nowadays, it's rather odd that no video of this exists anymore :confused:

DanDare
15-08-08, 03:24 PM
I remember watching that!

neio79
15-08-08, 03:58 PM
bolox, if this stuff realy existed and done all it claimed it would be on every bit of military kit in the world.

it dont take that long to bring it to manufacture.