Dave wrote:
I've stored stuff in a fridge that has a limited shelf life for quite a
long time after the life expired.
I'm not talking about messing up food, but keeping the stuff cold where
there is less of a chance of a reaction. if you have a shop fridge with
nothing to hurt, all the better.
I keep my stiff in zip lock bags in a fridge. There isn't much moisture
there due to the temperatures and the "stuff" has less chance to react
to moisture or oxygen because of the temperature.
This could be paint, bread or anything else.
It's basic physics.
As always there's the "it all depends" disclaimer. Nothing is 100%.
Speaking of zip lock bags... (dreaded thread drift warning!)
I finally tries bagging Bondo!
I did some boat work this last year. Made a mold to form
a pair of fiberglass shelves to fit above the berths.
Aviation composite techniques work fine on boats too!
Making the mold I needed a radius corner on a plywood form.
I've used Bondo for this before - but what a freaking mess to clean up!
So I dumped the Bondo in a reinforced Zip Lock bag (duct tape doubler
over the corner to keep the seams from popping open) and squirted the
bead out like cake decoration.
Then ran a tongue depressor down the bead to form the radius - and it
was DONE.
Came out pretty nice too, I think.
Richard
Pic of plywood plug with finished radius:
http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavel...8-cab.htm#mold