[NHCOLL-L:3508] Re: Neoprene rubber stoppers
Furth, David
FURTHD at si.edu
Thu Jul 26 10:49:17 EDT 2007
Bakelite (hard) is also not long-lasting. Soft plastic tops with
polyethylene liners are much better
******************************************************
David G. Furth, Ph.D.
Department of Entomology
MRC 165, P.O. Box 37012
National Museum of Natural History
Smithsonian Institution
Washington, D. C. 20013-7012 USA
Phone: 202-633-0990
Fax: 202-786-2894
Email: furthd at si.edu
Website: www.entomology.si.edu
________________________________
From: owner-nhcoll-l at lists.yale.edu
[mailto:owner-nhcoll-l at lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Mark O'Brien
Sent: Thursday, July 26, 2007 7:51 AM
To: bradh at rom.on.ca; Entomology Discussion List; NHCOLL-L at lists.yale.edu
Subject: [NHCOLL-L:3505] Re: Neoprene rubber stoppers
Brad:
After having to replace about 70,000 gray EPDM stoppers (sold by West,
and we should have sued them) and 3 dram vials in our collections with
4 dram vials with screwtop polyseal closures, I can tell you that rubber
stoppers of any kind are to be avoided. Although the real neoprene
stoppers tend to have quite a long life, they are not archival, and they
do not always fit the vials properly, etc. In our case, the EPDM
materials oxidized and the part exposed to the air melted after 15+
years of use. My suggestion is to make the switch to the screw top
glass vials and use bakelite tops with the polyseal cone liners. M
Jacobs and Sons in Detroit, MI sell them in bulk at a fraction of the
cost of places like VWR, etc.
Mark
---------------------
Mark F. O'Brien, Collections Manager
Insect Division, Museum of Zoology
2053 Ruthven Museums
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1079
734-647-2199
----------------------
On 7/25/07 10:54 AM, "Brad Hubley" <bradh at rom.on.ca> wrote:
Hi all;
I'm searching for a supplier of neoprene rubber stoppers for our glass
vials. We used to purchase our stoppers from West Pharmaceutical but
have been told that they no longer supply them. I have tried a number
of other sources (Plasticoid, VWR Scientific, BioQuip, etc.) but have
come up short, mainly because the length of our stoppers are what is
proving to be problematic. The dimensions of our stoppers are 16 mm top
diameter x 12 mm bottom diameter x 20 mm length and the samples I have
been provided are 25 mm in length (or longer). (If you need to see what
kind of stoppers I'm talking about then go to
http://www.vwrcanlab.com/catjpg/y01/y0155.jpg). I'm concerned that if I
go with the longer stoppers, that the bottom of the stoppers will expand
in the vials over time making them almost impossible to get back into
the vials (we've encountered this on a regular basis with stoppers that
are pushed too far into vials).
If you have any suggestions as to suppliers, could you please let me
know?
Many thanks,
Brad
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Brad Hubley
Entomology Collection Manager
Department of Natural History
Royal Ontario Museum
100 Queen's Park, Toronto, Ontario
Canada M5S 2C6
Phone: 1-416-586-5764
FAX: 1-416-586-5553
email: bradh at rom.on.ca
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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