SmokeySquid
Registered
I think this would be an interesting topic for the new supplies and accessories group so I will propose the question. If it doesn't really fit here please move it or I can delete it.
Would it potentially make a difference in longevity of the peptides if they were stored below -20c? Now I know that at -80c they supposedly last an indefinite amount of time but the scientific freezers that can get that low are ridiculously expensive and probably not practical for most people. But could there be a middle ground that might buy more time in storage at a reasonable cost equipment wise?
I know from years of fixing old junk that most cheap freezers (freezer only freezers) have a manual thermostat that controls set points for the compressor cycle and they can usually be adjusted up and down a bit to account for different environmental conditions or just drift as they age. I was once able to get a chest freezer to reliably get down to -32c after changing out a thermostat that had failed and wondered if I could get one of those little cheap amazon freezers to do the same.
Something like the Honeywell H11MFB might be modifiable to get much colder than it otherwise would and would be a good size to store peps in without burning a bunch of electricity.
Would a difference of 12c really make that much of a difference? Could a little freezer like that even stand to hold that much of a temperature differential? Not sure but for $150 I'm tempted to try just to see if it's possible.
But I suppose that wouldn't mean anything if it wouldn't allow them to last any longer
Any thoughts?
Would it potentially make a difference in longevity of the peptides if they were stored below -20c? Now I know that at -80c they supposedly last an indefinite amount of time but the scientific freezers that can get that low are ridiculously expensive and probably not practical for most people. But could there be a middle ground that might buy more time in storage at a reasonable cost equipment wise?
I know from years of fixing old junk that most cheap freezers (freezer only freezers) have a manual thermostat that controls set points for the compressor cycle and they can usually be adjusted up and down a bit to account for different environmental conditions or just drift as they age. I was once able to get a chest freezer to reliably get down to -32c after changing out a thermostat that had failed and wondered if I could get one of those little cheap amazon freezers to do the same.
Something like the Honeywell H11MFB might be modifiable to get much colder than it otherwise would and would be a good size to store peps in without burning a bunch of electricity.
Would a difference of 12c really make that much of a difference? Could a little freezer like that even stand to hold that much of a temperature differential? Not sure but for $150 I'm tempted to try just to see if it's possible.
But I suppose that wouldn't mean anything if it wouldn't allow them to last any longer

Any thoughts?