AgCollector wrote:I guess my question is also, what types of users would be buying this?
Recyclersteve wrote:Aluminum will be a lot easier and cheaper to get than tin, but it is much softer than tin so that might not be so good for toys.
Pure tin is much softer than pure aluminum. On the Mohs scale (where diamond is a 10), pure tin is 1.5 and pure aluminum is 2.75. Tin is often alloyed with various amounts of bismuth, lead, and indium, and sometimes cadmium, to make low-temperature alloys of various hardnesses and melting points.
The low-melt alloys are popular in hobby casting. In industry, they are used to fixture odd shaped parts for machining operations. You can take something difficult to hold, like a turbine blade, pour a low-melt alloy around it to create a block you can clamp in a machine, do what you need to do, and then melt the alloy off to get the part back. They are also used in pipe/tube bending. You can fill the tube with a low-melt alloy, do the bending operation without collapsing the the tube, and then melt the alloy back out. There are lots of other minor applications too.