Mason jars to store dry chemicals?

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Gerald C Koch

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I have no problem with glass. I'm going to use mason jars for now - but will take KennyE's advice for the longer term and replace them when feasible with plastic jars.

I still have some dry chemicals from the early 80's in plastic jars but with metal lids - they have held up very well, so again for now, I'm just going to use the mason jar lids.

I have two jars of phenidone. One is glass and the contents are still good after 4o years. The other is plastic and the contents terned to black tar in less than a year. Glass is best for storing chemicals. Developers and other solution should not be mixed in the darkroom. Nor for that matter should raw chemicals be stored there. So glass is really not a problem.
 

Mike Wilde

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I do reuse food storage containers for darkroom chemistry. They do not go back into food storage use when they have finished thier darkroom use.

I use 'mr yuk' stickers I made up from an image I pulled of of the web to label every food container that contains a non food item.

Yes, wide mouth mason jars for many dry chems, as well as glass packer jars meant for dry drug storage use.

Non moisture or oxitation risk chemistry gets stored in plastic wide mount packer jars.
 

KennyE

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OK, OK..., I get it. If its good for your food, its good for your chemicals. Got it........

I know that glass has been on this planet longer than man. Every since lightening struck sand and fuse the two together. But plastic has come a long way since Booker T. Washington and Henry Ford the 1st.

Look guys, this is the way I see it. When PF stop shipping my chemicals in plastic containers, and start using glass. That will be the day..., I will start to change everything over to glass.

Besides, my industrial hero John Heniz started out using mason jars to sell his mother's horse radish.

Enjoy your 189 year mason jar designs.

I am standing down.

KennyE
 
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