Into the Night
Verified User
Silver corrodes.Silver does not corrode.
Tarnish is corrosion.It does tarnish, which is different than corroding.
It does change size. It corrodes.When silver oxidizes, it does not change size, so no corroding.
They both suffer wear from friction.Gold wears, which silver does not do.
Friction is not corrosion.Wearing is somewhat similar to corrosion in that integrity is destroyed slowly.
Not a problem.Tiny amounts of gold are used in electronics, but the wearing is a major problem.
Gold wire is used in mounting chips to their packages. It's encased in the package.
Gold plating is used on switch contacts and edge connectors, making both very reliable.
Oxidation is corrosion.Much more silver is used in industrial processes, because of its oxidizing, it is more reactive.
So?You can do far more with silver.
Neither is silver's value.Gold's value is not its use in electronics.
WRONG. It is valuable because you can use it to buy and sell.Its value is that it is rare, and more importantly perceived as valuable.
WRONG. Silver is easy to scratch. It also corrodes.Silver is more scratch resistant than aluminum, gold, or plastic.
Bad choice. A far better material is to go with carbon.If you want scratch resistants than of the four, you would go with silver.
Blatant lie. CD's DO age. CD makers DO want scratch resistance. That's why they coat their CDs in plastic. UV light is what causes CDs to age. Keep them away from UV light.But CD makers do not want scratch resistance. CD's are played without contact, so with reasonable care, lose no data over decades.
They are not.This meant that used CD's were exactly equal to new CD's.
CDs are not wind powered.In turn that meant that artists could expect sails at first,
CDs do not furl any sails either.but almost nothing after that.
No one considered the lack of sails on a CD to be a problem (except you).It was a major problem in the CD market.
Exchanges will easily convert from local currency to gold or back. That is the purpose of an exchange.Gold is difficult to use in exchanges, so it is not much of a currency.