It all depends... For what kind of piece? Hand-worked or cast? Delicate or heavy? Complex or simple?Date: 9/19/2008 5:16:07 PM
Author:my secret
Ruthenium or Cobalt Platinum 950
I am interested in a comparison of the two, benefits, weaknesses, colr, etc.
I was able to find my own answer on Mark Morrell''s website. I thought I would post it in case anyone else is interested. Here is an excerpt from Mark''s website:
http://www.mwmjewelry.com/platinum_purity.htm
"2) 95% platinum (950) - alloyed with 5% ruthenium - Vickers hardness = 135
Ruthenium has an atomic weight of 101.07 - a bit over HALF the weight of iridium
By VOLUME, we''ll need almost twice as much ruthenium to equal the weight of the iridium in the above "950" iridium example.
This alloy is fairly hard - resists dents and dings well - is less malleable - is resistant to wear and abrasion but prone to cracking and requires more pressure to be imposed on a stone during the setting process than the softer alloys. When it doesn''t crack, it features all of the longevity that platinum is renowned for. This alloy works reasonably well for both casting and hand fabrication - when it doesn''t crack. This is a very good alloy for machine cut parts.
3) 95% platinum (950) - alloyed with 5% cobalt - Vickers hardness = 135
Cobalt has an atomic weight of 58.933200 = roughly only 30% of the atomic weight of platinum and iridium.
When we consider the VOLUME of this element required to equal 5% of the weight of our platinum, we need almost 3 1/3 times the volume of our iridium to generate 5% of our platinum by WEIGHT.
This alloy is fairly hard - resists dents and dings well - is not reasonably malleable or workable at the bench - is much less resistant to wear and abrasion than the iridium and ruthenium alloys - lacks longevity because of it''s LACK of resistance to wear and abrasion and will require that more pressure be imposed on a stone during the setting process. This alloy works extremely well for casting. This metal polishes quickly because polishing is "abrasion" and the alloy doesn''t resist abrasion as we''d otherwise expect platinum to do. This alloy features a natural "bluish" color cast due to the high volume of cobalt. Rhodium plating is often employed to hide it''s native color. This metal it is magnetic. You can actually pick up a piece made of this metal with a strong magnet. Welding and hand fabrication have proven to be problematic for bench jewelers / repair technicians."
This was actually one of the best resources I could find related to this in fact, I may have changed my mind on a setting.