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Commercial Beekeeping in New Zealand
making oxalic strips
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<blockquote data-quote="tristan" data-source="post: 12836" data-attributes="member: 30"><p>forgive my poor wording.</p><p>keep in mind that "it works" and "working the best it can" is two different things.</p><p>i need it to work consistently and without failure in every climate. having it "work" is not good enough.</p><p></p><p>certainly it would be interesting to compare the two materials (and hopefully others as well) but just need to get manufacturing process dialed in first so i can crank them out in large scale.</p><p></p><p>fyi i had a strip fall out of the pack when wrapping and i left it aside in the hot room overnight. today its actually dry to the touch, to the point that i can handle it and get no meaningful acid residue on my hands/gloves. while these are only drained they are not "wet". they are also not white with acid.</p><p>i think the key here is draining them while they are kept warm. it will interesting to see how they are when the packs are opened up at room temp in a few months time.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tristan, post: 12836, member: 30"] forgive my poor wording. keep in mind that "it works" and "working the best it can" is two different things. i need it to work consistently and without failure in every climate. having it "work" is not good enough. certainly it would be interesting to compare the two materials (and hopefully others as well) but just need to get manufacturing process dialed in first so i can crank them out in large scale. fyi i had a strip fall out of the pack when wrapping and i left it aside in the hot room overnight. today its actually dry to the touch, to the point that i can handle it and get no meaningful acid residue on my hands/gloves. while these are only drained they are not "wet". they are also not white with acid. i think the key here is draining them while they are kept warm. it will interesting to see how they are when the packs are opened up at room temp in a few months time. [/QUOTE]
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