Have you tried leaving some air between the flavoring and the rubber piece? It works for me.
Have you tried leaving some air between the flavoring and the rubber piece? It works for me.
A small glass graduated cylinder would work. By the way TFA Ripe Banana is also a syringe killer.
Cheers,
Steve
Nice suggestion. The next question I wanted to ask was is it the rubber piece that is expanding or the tube itself.
So is TFA coconut candy.
Are Esters present in the Flavoring? Is that what is Causing the Problems with some Polymers?
Esters are pretty much ubiquitous in many types of flavors. Hard to avoid esters. I don't know what causes these problems, mainly because I don't know exactly what is in flavors, and I don't know how all polymers interact with them. Very much unknown, at least in the time I can give to it.
Thanks for the Reply Kurt.
I remember doing some Uneducated Research on Esters when the Polycarbonate Cracking issue 1st surfaced. And how Esters are Formed. Unfortunately, My Knowledge of Chemistry is Limited to a Few College course I took Decades ago.
And as you posted Years Ago, Not Knowing what Chemical Compounds are present is kinda doing "Bucket Chemistry".
It is Confounding that Clearos and Tank Bodies are still being made from Polycarbonates instead of something like Polypropylene. But the forming of Threads and the Highly Transparent look are factors.
Thank again for you reply and I hope things are Going Well with all your e-Liquid Policy Projects.
Thanks, zoiDman! I also do not know why polycarbonate is still being use, but you are right, probably aesthetics and ability to have threading. Probably someone will come up with something better. HDPE would be good, but it will not be clear. I've never cracked a tank with one, but I am not fond of the plastic taste, which is actually plasticizers (BPA, and others). I have a DCT tank made of milled lucite with is heartier and no taste, and no evidence I have found with etching. Has beautiful green, white and turquoise marbling and is translucent.
I am leery of inhaling anything that can etch plastic. Even though the two might be totally unrelated, it just doesn't sit will with me.
Cutting threads in LDPE/HDPE or Polypropylene isn't very doable in the type of Thread Heights seen on Most Tank Bodies or Clearos.
Injection Molding small height threads is Possible. Due to the Shrinkage of the Material just prior to Stripping the Part from the Die Set. But it can be Tricky.
I am with you in being Wary of using e-Liquids that can Degrade "Plastics". And this is something that is Not Considered when Many People think about Regulations.
That is, as it is Now, a Vendor can Package their e-liquids in Any Type of Container they Choose. There are No Requirements for e-Liquids being Stored/Used in Any Type of "Plastic".
So if I decided to, I could sell e-Liquids in Non-1st-Use Polystyrene Containers. Either thru Ignorance or because I found a Good Deal on Polystyrene Bottles on e-Bay.
Yikes, polystyrene! I wonder how many juices will arrive to the customer as sticky blobs of melted goo? Point well taken.
Don't get me Wrong.
I think VERY Few people would Knowingly package e-liquids in a Container that was made up of Some Amount of Polystyrene.
But in this case, Ignorance is NOT Bliss.
Most Vendors are Not Monomer Experts. And have to Trust what a Supplier tells them about the Chemical Composition of the Containers that they will be Using. And that they are from 100% Pure, 1st Use Feedstock.
Having Standards to Ensure that what goes Into a Container are "Safe" and that there is Accountability/Traceability is Needed. But Doesn't there also Need to be Standards on Packaging?
e-liquid Regulations to me are a Double Edged Sword. On one side I see a Manipulation of a Market to Benefit a Select group of Players. But on the Other Side I see the Underlying Structures that Improves and Ensures Overall Product Safety for the Entire Market.