Re: [bolger] Re yogurt cups
Or just put any desired amount of water in one cup and mark it on the outside then fill to the line and pour into another cup twice and mark. Now you have two cups for mixing a 2:1 ratio. Use one for resin the other for hardener, measuring and pouring into another cup for mixing. The yogurt cups usually come with convenient snap on lids to keep your measuring cups clean. It doesn't matter what the volume is and you can have several sets for different volumes. I use cottage cheese containers to do exactly this and pour bigger amounts into plastic picnic glasses for mixing. Between the pumps and my measuring cups I can get almost any small or large batch.
Jeff
Jeff
----- Original Message -----
From: Lincoln Ross
To:bolger@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, April 02, 2004 12:06 AM
Subject: [bolger] Re yogurt cups
Another idea I've heard of:
Make a balance, maybe just a flat stick with two cups and a pivot in
between. Make sure pivot distance accounts for desired weight ratio, and
ballast the pivot so it balances with an empty cup in each attached cup.
Now put in epoxy parts until it balances, pour one into other, and mix.
May the Swartz be with you...
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Another idea I've heard of:
Make a balance, maybe just a flat stick with two cups and a pivot in
between. Make sure pivot distance accounts for desired weight ratio, and
ballast the pivot so it balances with an empty cup in each attached cup.
Now put in epoxy parts until it balances, pour one into other, and mix.
May the Swartz be with you...
Make a balance, maybe just a flat stick with two cups and a pivot in
between. Make sure pivot distance accounts for desired weight ratio, and
ballast the pivot so it balances with an empty cup in each attached cup.
Now put in epoxy parts until it balances, pour one into other, and mix.
May the Swartz be with you...