Film, Media & TV1 min ago
Silver plate versus EPNS.
I have recently bought a sauce bottle holder that the seller described as "silver plated". When I received it it had EPNS stamped on the bottom. This I know stands for electro plated nickel silver and I know that it contains no silver whilst silver plated items are coated with a thin layer of actual silver. Depending on the thickness of this coating depends the quality or put another way the thicker the coating the better the quality. Can anyone please verify my thoughts or refute them or give any additinal information to persuade the seller the error he has made.
Answers
in EPNS the bass metal is Nickel Silver which is then electroplate d with Silver.
11:18 Wed 11th Nov 2009
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Well. if EPNS on an item means its plated with something other than silver, I'll be first in the queue to sue . or report to Trading Standards, Harrods, all the London auction houses, the London Silver Vaults' traders and many others.LOL It's been a standard trade term, and mark, for a silver plated item for as long as I can remember, and certainly as long as I've been buying silver and plate.
Nickel silver is 'German silver' and, as said,contains no silver itself. It's chosen as the base metal alloy for silver plating because it doesn't bleed (show a reddish colour ) when the plating wears off through constant polishing. The old metal used would show through as red,hence the term 'bleed'.
Nickel silver is 'German silver' and, as said,contains no silver itself. It's chosen as the base metal alloy for silver plating because it doesn't bleed (show a reddish colour ) when the plating wears off through constant polishing. The old metal used would show through as red,hence the term 'bleed'.
Strictly speaking (and I have this from an Assay Office), silver plate means solid silver (not pure silver, but one of the standard alloys of silver which come in various degrees of fineness, similar to 9 carat, 14 carat and 18 carat gold). This should be carefully distinguished from "silver plated", but, unfortunately, it frequently isn't. here's the quote from the Assay Office (Birmingham):
You are quite right that the term 'plate' is the traditional and correct word for solid precious metal; in the past, used more to refer to silver, but more recently to all precious metals. 'Plated', therefore, refers strictly to articles of base metal constitution with a thin covering of precious metal.
You are quite right that the term 'plate' is the traditional and correct word for solid precious metal; in the past, used more to refer to silver, but more recently to all precious metals. 'Plated', therefore, refers strictly to articles of base metal constitution with a thin covering of precious metal.
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