From: William Sommerwerck on
> I would not rely on "safe at room temperature" as an
> indication of "safe at elevated temperatures" and would
> distrust any company that did so without extensive testing.

Then call GE ("We bring goo things to life") and ask.

(Forgive me for trying to be clever, but if you don't get /that/ one...)


From: Robert Macy on
On Apr 12, 8:13 am, "William Sommerwerck" <grizzledgee...(a)comcast.net>
wrote:
> > I would not rely on "safe at room temperature" as an
> > indication of "safe at elevated temperatures" and would
> > distrust any company that did so without extensive testing.
>
> Then call GE ("We bring goo things to life") and ask.
>
> (Forgive me for trying to be clever, but if you don't get /that/ one...)

what did we do to deserve this PUNishment?
From: Robert Macy on
On Apr 11, 2:39 pm, Rich Webb <bbew...(a)mapson.nozirev.ten> wrote:
> On Sun, 11 Apr 2010 10:45:28 -0700 (PDT), Robert Macy
>
>
>
>
>
> <m...(a)california.com> wrote:
> >On Apr 11, 4:13 am, "William Sommerwerck" <grizzledgee...(a)comcast.net>
> >wrote:
> >> > What is the best way to reseal this junction, but preserve
> >> > the requirement that the liquid in contact will be consumed
> >> > by humans?
>
> >> Silicone adhesives, as far as I know, are not particularly toxic in the
> >> first place, and I doubt a properly cured bond would leach.
>
> >> > Can food be placed in contact if I use superglue? Doubt it, but need
> >> > confirmation.
>
> >> Superglue isn't stable. It can be weakened simply by contact with water.
>
> >> I'm inclined to agree with the poster who suggested buying a new pot.
>
> >not an option
>
> Short answer: GFGI
>
> Medium answer: A search of "food grade adhesive" turns up some likely
> candidates. This looks promising:
> <http://www.emisupply.com/catalog/su5005-food-grade-silicone-hitemp-10...>
>
> --
> Rich Webb     Norfolk, VA

2nd attempt at replying...

Thanks! this looks exactly right. works up to 200C, costs like $4.25
per tube

only caveat may be that the adhesive won't stick to this plastic. But
might still work as a 'filler' type gasket.
From: bz on
Robert Macy <macy(a)california.com> wrote in news:cd57f5e4-cc4c-43c5-bdab-
e6fb76ade71a(a)j21g2000yqh.googlegroups.com:

> On Apr 12, 8:13�am, "William Sommerwerck" <grizzledgee...(a)comcast.net>
> wrote:
>> > I would not rely on "safe at room temperature" as an
>> > indication of "safe at elevated temperatures" and would
>> > distrust any company that did so without extensive testing.
>>
>> Then call GE ("We bring goo things to life") and ask.
>>
>> (Forgive me for trying to be clever, but if you don't get /that/ one...)
>
> what did we do to deserve this PUNishment?

sounds like a new flavor (the pun-ish mint)



--
bz 73 de N5BZ k

please pardon my infinite ignorance, the set-of-things-I-do-not-know is an
infinite set.
From: Michael A. Terrell on

Robert Macy wrote:
>
> On Apr 12, 8:13 am, "William Sommerwerck" <grizzledgee...(a)comcast.net>
> wrote:
> > > I would not rely on "safe at room temperature" as an
> > > indication of "safe at elevated temperatures" and would
> > > distrust any company that did so without extensive testing.
> >
> > Then call GE ("We bring goo things to life") and ask.
> >
> > (Forgive me for trying to be clever, but if you don't get /that/ one...)
>
> what did we do to deserve this PUNishment?


Anyone working in electronics deserves lots of PUNishment.


--
Lead free solder is Belgium's version of 'Hold my beer and watch this!'
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