jimbot58 wrote: |
Why is it though, that bottle of paint you just bought fresh a month ago has turned to a hard rubbery mass the first time you went to use it? |
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Chemicals like paints react to lots of agents in the envronment, and the chemical compositions of paints have been changed over the years. Maybe paints go off faster when certain hazardous chemicals are replaced with not-so-hazardous versions.
Like when treating boat hulls for algae: It seems that the most efficient paints tend to contain some pretty nasty toxic chemicals - which happens to be the reason why these paints reject algae so efficiently. Loose those toxines and loose the effects they bring to the party.
If some of the toxines that have been replaced in paint recipes over the past decades had as purpose to extend the shelf life of the paint, one would expect that contemporary paints go off faster than the older recipes.
DoC