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Pipes & Tobacco
Tobacco Discussion Forum
Can a tin dry out completely?
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<blockquote data-quote="KevinM" data-source="post: 347473" data-attributes="member: 2318"><p>Possible. A B&M in my employer's neighborhood was going out of business and evenyually put remaining tins on sale for an absurdly low price. Sone of them were stored just above the peripheral lighting and just below the ceiling. They'd been there for ten years of so. Crispy would be an understatement. So given inhospitable conditions, it's possible. How inhospitable do they have to be? I dunno.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="KevinM, post: 347473, member: 2318"] Possible. A B&M in my employer's neighborhood was going out of business and evenyually put remaining tins on sale for an absurdly low price. Sone of them were stored just above the peripheral lighting and just below the ceiling. They'd been there for ten years of so. Crispy would be an understatement. So given inhospitable conditions, it's possible. How inhospitable do they have to be? I dunno. [/QUOTE]
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Can a tin dry out completely?
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