• @VarvenOP
    link
    37 months ago

    True it could be but if it was acid wouldn’t it melt the plastic

    • @Hackworth
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      English
      157 months ago

      Did you watch Breaking Bad?

      • @VarvenOP
        link
        27 months ago

        No I have never watched breaking bad

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      137 months ago

      It depends on the plastic and the acid involved.

      Most plastics are unreactive with most acids. Sometimes, like with Hydrofluoric acid, it must be stored in plastic, because it can dissolve glass.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          17 months ago

          the acids used in brewery for sanitization can wreck metals too. we had some plated brass fittings that got mixed in with the stainless stuff and the acid water turned green and the brass was exposed. some other formerly shiny parts turned grey and chalky and very soft. Some places love their brass but I just want everything to be stainless so I can leave it soaking in sani for as lonng as I’m too lazy to deal with it which is forever.

          • @EtherWhack
            link
            27 months ago

            Isn’t brass antimicrobial though?

            • @[email protected]
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              fedilink
              27 months ago

              No idea but probably not enough to be good enough for food safety inspectors, or my own fear of any kind of microbe, contaminant, or filth.