Can you say Microwave?

Unless this process is done in a Faraday shielded enclosure, there will be some serious spurious emissions. I doubt that these devices are considered as being sold to the general public so FCC compliance is probably not a requirement. In an industrial environment, it's usually the operator that is working from a shielded enclosure, somewhat like the X-ray technician at your local medical facility. But what about the salesperson on the trade show floor and those watching him?

-CB

At 08:27 AM 6/26/2005 -0400, you wrote:
In a message dated 6/25/2005 10:09:06 AM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I would guess that they are using an inductive heating system that heats to a controlled temperature, taper tipped shafts so that thinning of the epoxy and gap voids is not an issue, and (here is the important part) an epoxy system that is designed for a short, heated, cure cycle so that the mechanical properties aren't degraded significantly.

Alan Brooks
http://www.inductionheating.com/

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