do you use MDI because it is a solid? and is it already abrasion resistant or do you have to make it that way.
The MDI is solid when it come in but will be heated to make it fluid for production.
Its absolute NOT abrasion resistant, for that you need to add different polyols, agents etc etc. (and thats one of the secrets)...
BUT making wheels more abrasion resistant will also implicate that they get maybe lower rebounds and so also lower speed......so its searching for the right combinations etc etc.
and i dont really understand what you mean by letters and number are you talking about the chemical make up?
Yepp, those letters and numbers tells what blend the prepolymer is and whats needed to add etc etc.
and i read the hardness is just measured with a meter of how bouncy it is or isnt so could you make your wheels with different amounts of w/e or is there really only one particular way to reach a specific hardness. that cant be true because there are shitty wheels.
The hardness is messured with a "Shore"-meter, BUT Shore A will tell you NOTHING about the quality of the Urethane (put a shoremeter on a soft piece of wood and you also can messure lets say 86A, but wooden wheels will not work at all............) So the Shore grade tells you the hardness of a product, nothing more, nothing less......
The quality of the prepolymer in basic and the type of blends and mixtures will make the wheels more better, more rebound, or/and more abrasion resistent etc etc, Its just for what you need the polymer for.
and your wheels always seem soft but lets say clear wheels would they be made of tdi or a different base that is clear liquid?
Clear wheels are mostly made out of TDI witch is a less higher quality then the type of MDI blends we use.
To make it simpler: Clear PU is allways a less quality then Milky PU. Then its also so that HAND POURED wheels are much better then machined poured wheels........SOME BLENDS are IMPOSSIBLE to pour with machines (read: our blends...).....