Tossing both will dramatically extend life expectancyThe sorb or the wife?
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Tossing both will dramatically extend life expectancyThe sorb or the wife?
I wonder who writes those SDSs. Sodalime can reach 100C in operation and keeps its performance (or even improves it). AFAIK the only risk of heating (in sane range) is drying out.Data sheet should always be the first stop. It gives 0-35C for the safe storage range. 100F is 38C, up to you if you think 3degC will make a difference. I would imagine a shipping container in summer tops out well above that, I can't imagine they're moving lime refrigerated.
They are written for the lowest common denominator of human being and know that 0-35 is a reasonable operating range for most people.I wonder who writes those SDSs. Sodalime can reach 100C in operation and keeps its performance (or even improves it). AFAIK the only risk of heating (in sane range) is drying out.
This is what I meant:They are written for the lowest common denominator of human being and know that 0-35 is a reasonable operating range for most people.
It's probably the limits of whatever the test range or standard was specified (assuming it comes from testing and not just a desktop study). If you don't ask a lab to test to failure then they won't test to failure. Well they probably will, they just won't certify for anything you haven't paid for. If you've paid to know it's OK between 0 & 35C then that's all you're getting paperwork for.