When curing everyone always says to use glass mason jars. Why can't it be in a stainless steel airtight container ?
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Originally posted by tex View PostWhen curing everyone always says to use glass mason jars. Why can't it be in a stainless steel airtight container ?
Check out Grove bags. They will maintain your herb at the proper humidity and will cure your weed as good as jars.
I still use glass jars but moreso out of habit than anything else. I have a cool dark place for them to reside.
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Why do laboratory technicians use glass beakers, glass test tubes, glass everything and not SS?
Same reason we use glass. Its pure and doesn't contaminate the contents, stainless steel does, big time.Grow Room: 11' x 7' x 7.5'H, 480w AC, 13gal/day dehumidifier, 1.5gal ultrasonic humidifier, 60gal (27gal usable) nute tank, 20" & 16" pedestal fans & 18" wall fan. Lighting, fertigation and climate automated
Lights: 2 x SF-7000, 5 x 30w 660&730nm supp. red boosters, 4 x 80w 5000K corner fills
Medium: Coco 100%, 13gal pots, drain to waste
Current Grow: 4 x photos, old school, 66 days of veg flipped 25 Feb harvested day 65F 3lb11oz.
Previous Grow: Lots of big dead mouldy buds, medium and small buds made it, barely. Primarily indica traits. Cured in glass jars.
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Originally posted by Bluey View PostWhy do laboratory technicians use glass beakers, glass test tubes, glass everything and not SS?
Same reason we use glass. Its pure and doesn't contaminate the contents, stainless steel does, big time.
Why glass? Because it's easier to sterilize, stands up to more classes of chemicals and is generally cheaper than SS.
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Originally posted by Rootsruler View Post
Can you explain how SS contaminates weed?
Why glass? Because it's.....
Ask a metallurgist.
A bit of googling shows
"Stainless steel is a typical contact material used during the manufacturing, shipping, and storage process for biologic products. Stainless steel commonly used in biopharmaceutical applications is of the grade 316L and is an alloy containing mainly iron, nickel, chromium with minor amounts of manganese and vanadium. Stainless steel is a major source for metal leachables, especially if the surface of the equipment or tank is not properly treated. The main leachable components are iron, chromium and nickel. Several fold higher levels of metals such as iron and nickel have been shown to leach into a liquid formulation after storage at room temperature in unpassivated compared to passivated stainless steel vessels [12]."
Last edited by Bluey; 09-28-2023, 06:49 PM.Grow Room: 11' x 7' x 7.5'H, 480w AC, 13gal/day dehumidifier, 1.5gal ultrasonic humidifier, 60gal (27gal usable) nute tank, 20" & 16" pedestal fans & 18" wall fan. Lighting, fertigation and climate automated
Lights: 2 x SF-7000, 5 x 30w 660&730nm supp. red boosters, 4 x 80w 5000K corner fills
Medium: Coco 100%, 13gal pots, drain to waste
Current Grow: 4 x photos, old school, 66 days of veg flipped 25 Feb harvested day 65F 3lb11oz.
Previous Grow: Lots of big dead mouldy buds, medium and small buds made it, barely. Primarily indica traits. Cured in glass jars.
- Likes 1
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Originally posted by Bluey View PostWhy do laboratory technicians use glass beakers, glass test tubes, glass everything and not SS?
Same reason we use glass. Its pure and doesn't contaminate the contents, stainless steel does, big time.1 Photo
- Likes 2
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Grow Room: 11' x 7' x 7.5'H, 480w AC, 13gal/day dehumidifier, 1.5gal ultrasonic humidifier, 60gal (27gal usable) nute tank, 20" & 16" pedestal fans & 18" wall fan. Lighting, fertigation and climate automated
Lights: 2 x SF-7000, 5 x 30w 660&730nm supp. red boosters, 4 x 80w 5000K corner fills
Medium: Coco 100%, 13gal pots, drain to waste
Current Grow: 4 x photos, old school, 66 days of veg flipped 25 Feb harvested day 65F 3lb11oz.
Previous Grow: Lots of big dead mouldy buds, medium and small buds made it, barely. Primarily indica traits. Cured in glass jars.
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