Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The most popular approach - and the best for the environment - is to remelt it to produce more glass.
"We've got to make arrangements to remelt the gold into standard bars," I said.
Place over low heat to remelt and continue.
Sculptors can make a mistake and remelt it.
In fact, he probably used the two men's phasers to remelt the eighteen-year-old thermoconcrete.
He used the heat from the small fireplace to remelt the wax around the top, then put the empty bottle back in the crate.
If they get too hot, they will remelt.
"You have to remelt it," Cord put in.
Furnaces used to remelt metal in foundries.
"And since we remelt our type after each issue, it's always still there, hard at work, issue after issue of the Clarion."
The process of VIM can even begin electro-slag remelting, which can remelt electrodes.
By heating the probe immediately next to an indentation, the polymer will remelt and fill in the indentation, erasing it.
In cases where the volume of the drop is too large or the velocity is too slow, the metal will not solidify past equilibrium causing it to remelt.
In addition to steel scrap, imports of copper and other scrap have also increased, since it is considerably cheaper to remelt existing metal than to process raw ore.
The electroslag remelting (ESR) process is used to remelt and refine steels and various super-alloys, resulting in high-quality ingots.
While I do realize that the labor is increased in handling the returns, it makes far more sense to me than having to smash bottles and remelt them into another product.
A solidified mass of corium can remelt if its heat losses drop, by being covered with heat-insulating debris, or if water that is cooling the corium evaporates.
During the Han Dynasty (202 BC - 220 AD), cupola furnace were used to remelt most, if not all, iron smelted in the blast furnace.
The astronomers had to resort to what Dr. Angel calls a "crème brûlée process," adding more glass to the top of the mirror and firing the furnace up to remelt the top.
However, most of the waxes will still remain in solid form and the fuel has to be warmed up further until its Remix temperature in order to completely remelt and redissolve the waxes.
According to The New York Times, a 1964 guide called Earl Wilson's New York wrote that "artists, poets and promoters of coffeehouses from Greenwich Village are trying to remelt the neighborhood under the high-sounding name of 'East Village.'"