Since I live near the heart of anthracite country in. e. PA, and since I had an anthracite coal stove in my home for ten years and handled the stuff often, and since I was up along the Lehigh River Gorge today and picked up a small chunk of anthracite (the stuff was transported by the many thousands of tons in barges on the Lehigh Navigation Canal), I can testify that it does impart a slipperyness on contact with human skin, namely my thumb. As to records and needles I can't say for sure, but I am assuming it does the same.Lucius1958 wrote:Well, diamond is also carbon - but one wouldn't use it as a lubricant.Henry wrote: Interesting, because anthracite is almost pure carbon, and should therefore impart a lubricating quality to the record surface (think graphite). Any thoughts on this?
The slipperiness of graphite is due to the way the carbon atoms are arranged vs. anthracite…
Bill
BTW, you can tell bituminous coal (the really dirty stuff) from anthracite (the not-so-dirty, but still dirty stuff), by the former's tendency to smudge on contact, whereas the latter leaves only faint traces on the skin. As to diamond, I haven't yet tried this test on my wife's engagement ring.
