+u1bd2005 Posted April 10, 2012 Share Posted April 10, 2012 ok, i just did a trial test with a new micro container idea, the little plastic paint containers that you get with the scale model kits (as seen in pic below) So I put a piece of paper in the contained, along with a few 5p pieces to weight it down and submerged it in water for about 2 ays, didn't exactly have high hopes, but took it out, not a drop of water had gotten inside. These could prove great micro-cache containers if my next test goes well, i'm gonna write something on paper using a fine-liner/felt pen (more chance of running if it has water contact) and then submerge it for about 5 days. 1. Ideas on if you think these would be good for micro-cache's. 2. Have you used these as cache containers before and if so how would you rate them. Will let you know the result of my next test on them. Quote Link to comment
+TeamPennyFinder Posted April 10, 2012 Share Posted April 10, 2012 Test one out in the wild. Sun exposure will make some plastics brittle even after a little time outside. Make sure that it is exposed to sun,wind, rain, snow, avalanches (j/k on that one) You may have something there. Quote Link to comment
+DragonsWest Posted April 10, 2012 Share Posted April 10, 2012 It isn't that they are a problem while new, get some scuffing from natural dust or grit and that seal will go bye-bye. Then it's Log Soup. Quote Link to comment
+Ms.Scrabbler Posted April 10, 2012 Share Posted April 10, 2012 I've had a few of these out for a few years, haven't had a problem except when they aren't closed completely.I put fake evergreen pieces from a small Christmas tree on one, put it in the V of branches in a tree, even though the V was bare of other greens it was overlooked often. It stayed for a couple of years until the tree was cut down. Quote Link to comment
+SwineFlew Posted April 10, 2012 Share Posted April 10, 2012 They got a problem of breaking up after a couple years. All of them got wet logs. (I live in a part of Oregon where it rain most of the year) Quote Link to comment
+NYPaddleCacher Posted April 10, 2012 Share Posted April 10, 2012 They got a problem of breaking up after a couple years. All of them got wet logs. (I live in a part of Oregon where it rain most of the year) I've got a bunch of these at home that I think are similar. They're from one of the those "paint by the numbers" kits and if I recall there are about 20 containers. I don't know how long they would last in the wild but with that many containers one could replace them fairly often. Quote Link to comment
+power69 Posted April 11, 2012 Share Posted April 11, 2012 ok, i just did a trial test with a new micro container idea, the little plastic paint containers that you get with the scale model kits (as seen in pic below) So I put a piece of paper in the contained, along with a few 5p pieces to weight it down and submerged it in water for about 2 ays, didn't exactly have high hopes, but took it out, not a drop of water had gotten inside. These could prove great micro-cache containers if my next test goes well, i'm gonna write something on paper using a fine-liner/felt pen (more chance of running if it has water contact) and then submerge it for about 5 days. 1. Ideas on if you think these would be good for micro-cache's. 2. Have you used these as cache containers before and if so how would you rate them. Will let you know the result of my next test on them. a big version of the bio container. after about 10 finds the lids break off and shortly thereafter go missing. a fuji film cannister is better than those. Quote Link to comment
knowschad Posted April 11, 2012 Share Posted April 11, 2012 The paint works very nicely for camouflaging plastic match containers. Quote Link to comment
+secretagentbill Posted April 11, 2012 Share Posted April 11, 2012 There is a hundred-cache series along a bike trail in Michigan that I did a year or so back. (To save time and sanity, I only hit about half of them.) Many, if not most, of the containers were these little paint containers. There were also a few film cans and what-not thrown in. I'd say every single log was wet. Many were just mush. On several of them I didn't even pull the log out; I just drew an 'x' on the top of the log/mush/wad laying in the container. I use a gel pen, so that worked. From experience, I'd say these containers are a bad idea. Quote Link to comment
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