Motorcycles » rec.motorcycles.tech » Using used plastic container for oil
Using used plastic container for oil [message #485303] Thu, 20 October 2005 03:14
Ted Bennett  
This is a little off-topic, but you guys know everything, right? ;)

Would it be a bad idea to store unused motor oil in a plastic container
that has been used for liquid detergent if it has been cleaned and
rinsed? I am more concerned about bad effects on the oil than the
container, via leaching of something into the oil.

I like the container because of its neatly enclosed drip-free pouring
spout, but I can still smell the detergent after several rinsings.

Thanks for any pointers or warnings.

--
Ted Bennett
Re: Using used plastic container for oil [message #485305 ] Thu, 20 October 2005 03:54
Eugene  
"Ted Bennett" <tedbennett [at] earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:tedbennett-F2F8C1.18143619102005 [at] news1.west.earthlink.net...
> This is a little off-topic, but you guys know everything, right? ;)
>
> Would it be a bad idea to store unused motor oil in a plastic container
> that has been used for liquid detergent if it has been cleaned and
> rinsed? I am more concerned about bad effects on the oil than the
> container, via leaching of something into the oil.
>
> I like the container because of its neatly enclosed drip-free pouring
> spout, but I can still smell the detergent after several rinsings.
>
> Thanks for any pointers or warnings.
>
> --
> Ted Bennett

Not sure about the effect on motor oil, but I have been eyeing up the
Kirkland Laundry soap empties for some type of coolant dispenser or similar
use. It's a mighty handy dispenser.
Re: Using used plastic container for oil [message #485306 ] Thu, 20 October 2005 04:08
wayne mak  
I hope its not a problem to use them, because I do. I bought the 5 gallon
containers for the oils for my lathe and fill the soap jugs. They work real
nice because you can just dump the lid in and tighten, they self drain into
the jug. This is great with coolant or threading oil.
"ATP*" <eugene [at] ogedin.com> wrote in message
news:qNC5f.30130$Ge5.19606 [at] fe10.lga...
>
> "Ted Bennett" <tedbennett [at] earthlink.net> wrote in message
> news:tedbennett-F2F8C1.18143619102005 [at] news1.west.earthlink.net...
>> This is a little off-topic, but you guys know everything, right? ;)
>>
>> Would it be a bad idea to store unused motor oil in a plastic container
>> that has been used for liquid detergent if it has been cleaned and
>> rinsed? I am more concerned about bad effects on the oil than the
>> container, via leaching of something into the oil.
>>
>> I like the container because of its neatly enclosed drip-free pouring
>> spout, but I can still smell the detergent after several rinsings.
>>
>> Thanks for any pointers or warnings.
>>
>> --
>> Ted Bennett
>
> Not sure about the effect on motor oil, but I have been eyeing up the
> Kirkland Laundry soap empties for some type of coolant dispenser or
> similar use. It's a mighty handy dispenser.
>
Re: Using used plastic container for oil [message #485307 ] Thu, 20 October 2005 04:31
Jim Stewart  
Ted Bennett wrote:

> This is a little off-topic, but you guys know everything, right? ;)
>
> Would it be a bad idea to store unused motor oil in a plastic container
> that has been used for liquid detergent if it has been cleaned and
> rinsed? I am more concerned about bad effects on the oil than the
> container, via leaching of something into the oil.
>
> I like the container because of its neatly enclosed drip-free pouring
> spout, but I can still smell the detergent after several rinsings.
>
> Thanks for any pointers or warnings.


Test the container with a finger or two
of oil for a couple weeks. I once filled
a plastic container with spindle oil. The
oil sweated out the sides of the container
over time.
Re: Using used plastic container for oil [message #485308 ] Thu, 20 October 2005 04:56
Rudy  
> Would it be a bad idea to store unused motor oil in a plastic container
> that has been used for liquid detergent if it has been cleaned and
> rinsed?

No problem, its probably the same plastic used for oil anyway..look at the
recycling triangle on the bottom:

Both are probably "2"
Re: Using used plastic container for oil [message #485309 ] Thu, 20 October 2005 04:59
Shrub  
Ted Bennett wrote:

>
> Would it be a bad idea to store unused motor oil in a plastic container
> that has been used for liquid detergent if it has been cleaned and
> rinsed? I am more concerned about bad effects on the oil than the
> container, via leaching of something into the oil.
>
> I like the container because of its neatly enclosed drip-free pouring
> spout, but I can still smell the detergent after several rinsings.

Have you ever heard the term "mouse milk"? (1)

Since you know the name of the product, you can look up the Material
Safety Data Sheet and find out what the reactivity and flammability and
pH of the product is, as well as what kinds of dyes and odorants the
manufacturer has used to make the stuff look and smell attractive.

And the lingering trace amounts of the actual product might be measured
in a few parts per million, but if you just need to know, in order to
calm your righteous paranoia, by all means, GO to the MSDS. Bless you!

You're a Good Person and People Like You and you have a Right To Know,
by golly! Don't let anybody tell you different!

Might as well look up the carcenogenicity of the plastic used in the
container, too, as you might wind up with cancer of the crankshaft, and
gawd knows, nobody wants their crankshaft to fall off before they're
too senile to remember what it was orignally intended for!

You can fill up one of them intiguing plastic containers with your
favorite motor oil and cut the top off so you have room to drop a test
hamster in there and you can watch him swimming around in the golden
liquid and if the hamster doesn't turn pea green and start puking after
a day or two, well, you know that the plastic container and whatever it
had in it won't hurt your motorsickle.

That's the way them MSDS boys test hazardous substances. They drown a
lab rat in 5000 times the lethal dose, say it killed the test specimen
and declare the material to be diabolically hazardous!

(1) Engineers talk about "mouse milk" when they consider the
vanishingly small advantages or disadvantage caused by very small
quantities of anything. They call it "mouse milk" because you have to
milk about 100 mice to get a few drops of it...

I'd bet you would have to "milk" 500 empty soap bottle to get a single
drop of the odorant that excites desperate housewives to fondle
themselves intimately as they watch "Days of Our Lives"...
Re: Using used plastic container for oil [message #485310 ] Thu, 20 October 2005 05:26
john johnson  
In article <tedbennett-F2F8C1.18143619102005 [at] news1.west.earthlink.net>,
Ted Bennett <tedbennett [at] earthlink.net> wrote:

> This is a little off-topic, but you guys know everything, right? ;)
>
> Would it be a bad idea to store unused motor oil in a plastic container
> that has been used for liquid detergent if it has been cleaned and
> rinsed? I am more concerned about bad effects on the oil than the
> container, via leaching of something into the oil.

1. I'm assuming we're talking about a laundry detergent container, not a
dish detergent container. It shouldn't be an issue.

2. Why not use old oil containers? It's pretty easy to get used quart
containers with those handy pour spouts, if you ask around. And you get
the benefit of those super-accurate level indicators on the side!

--
Later,
John

johajohn [at] indianahoosiers.edu

'indiana' is a 'nolnn' and 'hoosier' is a 'solkk'. Indiana doesn't solkk.
Re: Using used plastic container for oil [message #485312 ] Thu, 20 October 2005 06:20
Jerry Foster  
"ATP*" <eugene [at] ogedin.com> wrote in message
news:qNC5f.30130$Ge5.19606 [at] fe10.lga...
>
> "Ted Bennett" <tedbennett [at] earthlink.net> wrote in message
> news:tedbennett-F2F8C1.18143619102005 [at] news1.west.earthlink.net...
> > This is a little off-topic, but you guys know everything, right? ;)
> >
> > Would it be a bad idea to store unused motor oil in a plastic container
> > that has been used for liquid detergent if it has been cleaned and
> > rinsed? I am more concerned about bad effects on the oil than the
> > container, via leaching of something into the oil.
> >
> > I like the container because of its neatly enclosed drip-free pouring
> > spout, but I can still smell the detergent after several rinsings.
> >
> > Thanks for any pointers or warnings.
> >
> > --
> > Ted Bennett
>
> Not sure about the effect on motor oil, but I have been eyeing up the
> Kirkland Laundry soap empties for some type of coolant dispenser or
similar
> use. It's a mighty handy dispenser.
>
>
Be a little careful, here. I save my used motor oil to use in starting
fires in the wood stove. I'll save you the effort of having to repeat a
couple "experiments" I did. 1). Milk jugs tend to leak. They're too
damned thin. 2). Laundry detergent jugs with the "push button" tap don't
work, either. The oil rots out the little "rubber" cap on the tap, it
crumbles and the oil leaks out.

Jerry
Re: Using used plastic container for oil [message #485313 ] Thu, 20 October 2005 17:38
Roger Shoaf  
"Ted Bennett" <tedbennett [at] earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:tedbennett-F2F8C1.18143619102005 [at] news1.west.earthlink.net...
> This is a little off-topic, but you guys know everything, right? ;)
>
> Would it be a bad idea to store unused motor oil in a plastic container
> that has been used for liquid detergent if it has been cleaned and
> rinsed?

No it would not. Poly bottles do not soak up much of anything. If your
rinse water does not foam then you should be just fine.


--
Roger Shoaf
If you are not part of the solution, you are not dissolved in the solvent.
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