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Posted

Hey all...

I usually buy line as I need it (flouro/braid). I have a chance to stock up on some line at a great price but have never stored it over the winter.

Recomendations, comments, ideas??? :D

  • Super User
Posted

cool, dry & dark for mono/fluoro.  an indoor closet is a good spot.  Braid will tolerate much more than the rest.

Posted
Posted by: flechero      Posted on: Yesterday at 5:54pm

cool, dry & dark for mono/fluoro.  an indoor closet is a good spot.  Braid will tolerate much more than the rest.

nailed it......

i keep my mono in an outdoor closet, not the perfect scenario.... but its OK...

the braid, well.... i dont worry about it much, it handles much, much more...

  • Super User
Posted
Hermetically sealed and stored at -273K.

No, the freezing point of water is -273.15K. Didn't you pay attention in Chemistry?

That's it kid, don't take any crap

  • Super User
Posted

Ziplock bag out of the light. It will last so long it will be a family heirloom :D

Posted
Posted by: Burley Mulder      Posted on: Aug 21st, 2009, 8:23pm

Hermetically sealed and stored at -273K.

Posted by: MattinOK      Posted on: Yesterday at 6:35pm

No, the freezing point of water is -273.15K. Didn't you pay attention in Chemistry?

have to throw this in then chemistry whiz......

the freezing point of water is 0 Celsius or 32 fahrenheit...., or whatever scale you want to look at it.....

-273.15, is absolute zero..... which is completely different.

Posted
Posted by: Burley Mulder      Posted on: Aug 21st, 2009, 8:23pm

Hermetically sealed and stored at -273K.

Posted by: MattinOK      Posted on: Yesterday at 6:35pm

No, the freezing point of water is -273.15K. Didn't you pay attention in Chemistry?

have to throw this in then chemistry whiz......

the freezing point of water is 0 Celsius or 32 fahrenheit...., or whatever scale you want to look at it.....

-273.15, is absolute zero..... which is completely different.

273 Kelvins = 0* C

0 K = absolute zero

-273 K = the point where all molecular movement ceases

Posted
Posted by: bmadd      Posted on: Today at 10:24am

mrlitetackle wrote on Yesterday at 11:31pm:

Quote:

Posted by: Burley Mulder      Posted on: Aug 21st, 2009, 8:23pm

Hermetically sealed and stored at -273K.

Quote:

Posted by: MattinOK      Posted on: Yesterday at 6:35pm

No, the freezing point of water is -273.15K. Didn't you pay attention in Chemistry?

have to throw this in then chemistry whiz......

the freezing point of water is 0 Celsius or 32 fahrenheit...., or whatever scale you want to look at it.....

-273.15, is absolute zero..... which is completely different.

273 Kelvins = 0* C

0 K = absolute zero

-273 K = the point where all molecular movement ceases

your a little confused as well.....

the last number you stated ( doesnt exist), 0 K is absolute zero, there is no such thing as -273.15 K... the -273.15 is the translation to the Centigrade scale. So 0 K is theoretically the coldest that anything can be.

here....

Definition: Absolute zero is the lowest possible temperature, at which point the atoms of a substance transmit no thermal energy - they are completely at rest. It is 0 degrees on the Kelvin scale, which translates to -273.15 degrees Celsius (or -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit).

The concept of an "absolute cold" was first presented by Robert Boyle in his 1665 New Experiments and Observations touching Cold. Various physicists explored this phenomenon, until Lord Kelvin derived his thermodynamic temperature scale, extrapolating backward to absolute zero based purely on the laws of thermodynamics.

Some substances, when cooled to near-absolute zero temperatures, reach a state of matter known as a superfluid, which exhibit strange properties.

  • Super User
Posted

id like to thank you all for viewing our August 2009 Science Fair thread.

join us next month when we look at the freezing point of the lube in your reels and see how it affects casting.

:D

  • Super User
Posted
sorry man ;D ;D ;D

just trying to clear up a few things for others :D

....nothin wrong with a little science though :D

i thought the whole thread was funny.

for my answer: i have a busted freezer in my basement that all my line goes in.

Posted
Posted by: skunked_again

i thought the whole thread was funny.

for my answer: i have a busted freezer in my basement that all my line goes in.

nice ;D

i just dont want "little Jonny" to do bad on his science quiz in class from some bad info on BR! ;):D :D :D

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