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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Metal
Titanium
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<blockquote data-quote="doug" data-source="post: 22703" data-attributes="member: 1835"><p>Mark Jackson at Precision Ceramics in Ca. has as much knowledge as anyone and he's opposed to casting it...oxide layer problems and just plain nasty. Milled seems to work for some. Al Tassi in Chicago does a lot of it. He'd be a great resource. If it were really viable I'd think Jim Glidewell would be all over it. He seems to be more interested in milling Titanium implant abutments than copings. I guess there's no bonding issues with an abutment.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="doug, post: 22703, member: 1835"] Mark Jackson at Precision Ceramics in Ca. has as much knowledge as anyone and he's opposed to casting it...oxide layer problems and just plain nasty. Milled seems to work for some. Al Tassi in Chicago does a lot of it. He'd be a great resource. If it were really viable I'd think Jim Glidewell would be all over it. He seems to be more interested in milling Titanium implant abutments than copings. I guess there's no bonding issues with an abutment. [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Metal
Titanium
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