Acetone - Mother's Day - 491

in #acetone5 years ago (edited)

I bought some acetone the other day at Walmart. It was only about $1. I was hoping to use it to make my headlights crystal clear and some other stuff. It didn't seem to work very well on the headlights for me. Supposedly you can also use acetone to weld plastic together and melt plastic and I guess it is good at cleaning in stains and cleaning up paint and marker. So far it hasn't really been useful for me yet but hopefully I will find some success with it perhaps as paint thinner or something.

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There are acetone's for everyday safe human use and then there are acetone's that are not. Most any acetone can claim one hundred percent or pure because the requirement needed to be met is less then one hundred percent but more than ninety nine percent, it's the other one percent added chemical volatility that changes it from everyday human use to say paint remover or hardware usage. That's why you'd never see a salon owner or a nail shop opt to use acetone based hardware paint remover to remove nail polish.

You researched acetone? Since like 100% pure acetone and 99% pure acetone should do about the same thing.

I probably wouldn't have but you said acetone could melt and weld plastic, that got me, someone who use to own a hair salon, thinking about the difference between acetone for nails and acetone you can buy in gallon containers at a hardware or for paint removal for I couldn't imagine that something used on nails could also melt plastic or that something that could melt plastic could be safe for contact on human skin around the nails. Incredible as it sounds, yes, that tiny little less than one percentage point makes all the difference....who knew?

Pliable soft plastics, you see it didn't melt the plastic bowl. Must be store bought remover isn't as strong as those bought in Beauty Supply stores where you need an acetone that can remove acrylic nails. That's a Sally's Beauty Supply nail remover in the video, they use to be just for licensed professionals before they went public...they also use to just sell certain stuff to the public but must have given up on trying to sort the difference between what chemical products should be sold to those holding licenses and learn to handle the chemical aspects while in school vs those that it didn't matter since they never ask me anymore if I am licensed if I am looking for a certain product. Anyway here's the rundown I was looking at:

“Technically, there is no such thing as an absolute 100% pure chemical. There are always small traces of impurities in any chemical. Practically, the number is rounded (up or down) both in science and in life. The term '100%' is for purities of 99.50% to 99.99%.

Not all '100%' acetone is made the same. In fact, they differ in their purities (99.50% to 99.99%) and the contents of the impurities (the ones that make up the other 0.01% to 0.50%). While all 99.50% to 99.99% acetones can be considered "100%", the contents of the impurities assign them to different grades.
• U.S.P or N.F. grades are suitable for human use (in food, drug, and skin applications)
• "ACS" and "Reagent" are not certified for human use
• "Lab", "Purified", or "Technical" grades are also not pure enough for human use

I am having the same problem trying to tell goof balls that glyphosate is not the dangerous chemical in Round Up, glyphosate is just a binder it's the other three percent add inert chemicals that make the glyphosate toxic. They think vaccine companies are using it in vaccines...which they are not. Glyphosate is what makes the inert toxic ingredients stick to the plants, the problem stems is that chemical companies just label it glyphosate because it makes up the bulk of what's in Round Up...probably because they don't want to admit what the other three percent ingredients are knowing them. Once the glyphosate becomes mixed with those ingredients it's contaminated, just as if you took anything you'd eat and mix it with gasoline...you wouldn't eat it because now it's toxic.

I think it melts most plastics or at least ABS plastics whatever those are.
Are they still using mercury in vaccines?

Must be soft pliable plastics since acetone is sold in plastic bottles I don't see hard plastics as an issue.

For the most part no, if your vaccines comes from a multiple dose bottle chances are there is some mercury but it's ethylmercury which breaks down in the body unlike methylmercury which is the mercury found in fish that will accumulate in the body and takes longer to break down which is why if you eat a lot of fish it can be toxic. That's why when we were talking about tuna fish I was telling you Dr Oz said you shouldn't eat more than two six ounces cans of tuna a week unless it's skipjack tuna, skipjack tuna doesn't have the mercury level found in other tuna. Pharmaceutical companies were ordered to take ethylmercury out of childhood vaccines, some vaccines never did contain mercury like MMRP, Chicken Pox and Polio vaccine. After they removed ethylmercury from vaccines they did studies and found that ethylmercury never did contribute to autism because the rate of autism didn't drop after it's removal it actually kept increasing. The reason it's used in multiple vial vaccines is to keep the vial from becoming contaminated but almost all vaccines now come in single vial doses, to make sure during the flu season that there is enough flu vaccine to go around they still do use multiple vial vaccines stockpiles so if you are worried about it they recommend you ask if your flu vaccine is coming from a single vial or a multiple vial. There also are two childhood vaccines that contain trace amounts of ethylmercury and the issue isn't with multiple or single vial applications it's use to keep the product from growing bacteria during the manufacturing process. Those are the DTAP vaccines.

I guess it works on car plastics but it seems weird it wouldn't melt the plastic bottles it's in. Like I think it could melt most car bumpers which are pretty sturdy.
I dunno I'm still concerned about injecting mercury directly into people bloodstreams especially babies and young children.

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