Go to Home Depot, look in the tools section under bits and blades, you will find drill bits, look for the High Speed Stainless Steel ones, not the tungsten ones. You will find some drill and router bits that have an amount of cobalt included. Take the pack with you as proof. Small bits are cheap.
2006-09-02 12:25:52
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answer #1
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answered by moontreker 2
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the easiest thing to get cobalt (for sure) that you can carry with you is a tube of oil paint called Cobalt Blue. You get it at an art supply store. Anything else you can't be certain, as there are other sources of blue color. Cobalt is used in permanent magnets for loadspeakers (alnico alloy) but again, unless you see a label identifying it, you can't be sure.
2006-09-01 21:21:12
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answer #2
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answered by gp4rts 7
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The Chevorlet Cobalt!
2006-09-01 20:34:16
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answer #3
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answered by Family Guy 3
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Some hip replacements use an alloy of cobalt and chrome - maybe take granny with you (and she can carry your bag).
Blue glass - especially the really deep blue that used to be used in medicine bottles. The colour of the glass is often called Bristol Blue - because of where it was produced in England.
2006-09-02 00:45:29
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answer #4
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answered by zpom 2
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A Cobalt SS sportcar and a Cobaltchloride paper
2006-09-01 20:34:33
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answer #5
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answered by syazwan sazali 1
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Alloys
Superalloys, for parts in gas turbine aircraft engines.
Corrosion- and wear-resistant alloys.
High speed steels.
Cemented carbides (also called hard metals) and diamond
tools.
Magnets and magnetic recording media.
Alnico magnets.
Catalysts for the petroleum and chemical industries.
electroplating because of its appearance, hardness, and resistance to oxidation.
Drying agents for paints, varnishes, and inks.
Ground coats for porcelain enamels.
Pigments (cobalt blue and cobalt green).
Battery electrodes.
Steel-belted radial tires.
Cobalt-60 has multiple uses as a gamma ray source:
It is used in radiotherapy.
It is used in radiation treatment of foods for sterilization (cold
pasteurization).
It is used in industrial radiography to detect structural flaws in
metal parts.
2006-09-07 04:01:12
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answer #6
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answered by Ranjit F 2
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Glass. It could be the blue tinting for a perfume bottle. I have no idea who Mr. Lois is though.
2006-09-01 20:34:44
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answer #7
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answered by Gremlin 4
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some drill bits
2006-09-01 20:34:55
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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pink paqint in rocks,
2006-09-01 22:02:21
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answer #9
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answered by eshaghi_2006 3
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