mista2much
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2015
- Messages
- 8
So, I've done a bit of research over the past week and have tried a few washes now with different brands of acetone.
From what I've read and seen for myself, it doesn't seem to really matter if your acetone does have water content as long as you're okay losing up to ~10% of actual product with blindly using the most hydrous of acetone, most of the time it seems like a 5% max. Getting truly "Ahydrous" acetone is impossible because the moment it is exposed to air it absorbs moisture, and most acetone already comes near the 99% mark.
I must reiterate though, I am pretty new to this, so I acknowledge that my experience could be entirely unrepresentative of the average washer's experience.
My question is, has anyone's product (with consistent washes) gone drastically below the expected acetone soluble cut level from using acetone that may have had too much water content?
Thanks in advanced
From what I've read and seen for myself, it doesn't seem to really matter if your acetone does have water content as long as you're okay losing up to ~10% of actual product with blindly using the most hydrous of acetone, most of the time it seems like a 5% max. Getting truly "Ahydrous" acetone is impossible because the moment it is exposed to air it absorbs moisture, and most acetone already comes near the 99% mark.
I must reiterate though, I am pretty new to this, so I acknowledge that my experience could be entirely unrepresentative of the average washer's experience.
My question is, has anyone's product (with consistent washes) gone drastically below the expected acetone soluble cut level from using acetone that may have had too much water content?
Thanks in advanced
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