Wel, thank you kind sir for doing that. Now , this may seem like an odd question as I am going to google it right after, but how is the Argon has purchased / added to the jar to displace the oxygen ? Through a tube system from the lid? Also, once jarred with the Argon gas and tossed in the freezer , what's the expected shelf life ? I'm assuming it degrades over time as each time I need to make a new liquid, it is exposed to oxygen? Then I would have to do the Argon gas process again before tossing in freezer.
Also, how much time do I exactly have to collect all of these supplies. And sorry to ask again, but what is the difference between the Nude nicotine based vs the 100ml/mg nicotine base that they both offer on the website.
Thank you guys so much.
No problem giving you the "quick and dirty" regarding this type of information, but you are going to miss out on the thought processes and work and discussions involved in coming to these conclusions.
Mishandling or ingesting 100mg/ml nicotine can kill you in my opinion. Make sure you know what you are getting in to in handling it by searching in the DIY section of ECF regarding this solvent. I accept no liability in your use, purchase, resale of the said liquid.
You do not do anything with the Argon gas. It is an inert gas that is placed in the bottle by Nude Nicotine, and you are given syringes and tips to remove the nicotine. The Argon gas stays in the bottle. It does not effect the nicotine in the bottle, it preserves it.
Nicotine can last 10yrs according to reports, some think longer such as 20 years.
Nude Nicotine was rated #1 by ECF users in a blind test in taste, color, smell...
THE DEEMING LAWS FOR VAPE PRODUCTS
ECF:
@Tommy-Chi
FDA DEEMING RULES AND WHAT THEY MEAN TO YOU
--Vape goods being sold before 2007 can remain available indefinitely at this point in time
--After August 8, 2016 no new products or changes to existing products are allowed
--Manufacturers of ALL e-liquids or vaping related products will have up to two years to submit FDA PMTA applications for products that have come to market after April 15, 2007 (KNOWN AS THE PREDICATE DATE) so that they may be reviewed for fitness within the market in accordance with FDA intents and purposes for tobacco products.
--The FDA PMTA review process is estimated to take a year and cost as much as $1 million per product
--There will be very few PMTA applications submit with most (if not all) coming from Big Tobacco
--There is no way of knowing if the FDA will approve any PMTA applications, as in the past few new tobacco products have been allowed to be marketed as tobacco products after the initial set of FDA regulations became law
--For products not passing the PMTA process, they must be withdrawn from the market
--It is expected that scarcity or the lack of vaping products will occur across all segments of the market
THE RESPONSE
--Remove tobacco classification because vaping products are primarily 100% tobacco free
--Change the predicate date from April 15, 2007 to the current date in (2016/2017/...) for the Pre-Market Tobacco Applications process (PMTA).
--Requesting a Substantial Equivalence (SE) Report instead of PMTA, so that all products that are essentially similar in operation to that which has already been accepted to also be accepted and allowed to be sold
--Overturn the ban on FREE SAMPLES so that vendors can send samples out to vapers
THE WHY
ECF:
@Mazinny, "By 2010, eighteen states, the District of Columbia, and three U.S. territories securitized some or all of their revenue entitlements from the MSA (TOBACCO: Master Settlement Agreement) payment schedule into bonds. The issued bonds totaled $40 billion and are backed by expected future MSA payments." (These bonds would eventually be worthless to the states if vaping continued to grow as it has b/c it is demolishing the market for cigarettes and has so far not been aggressivly regulated or taxed.)