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Pipes & Tobacco
Tobacco Discussion Forum
If Vacuum Sealing Stops Aging Does It Stop Lat Degradation?
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<blockquote data-quote="ZeroContent" data-source="post: 458734" data-attributes="member: 1367"><p>I think you're missing my question that if vacuum sealed in glass would it extend that time. </p><p></p><p>According to GLP, tobacco stored in a vacuum seal glass jar showed little signs of ageing after 3 years which sounds to me like at least a 20% ageing speed over 3 years. At that rate it would take 15 years in the vacuum jar to reach the age of a tobacco just put into the jar like normal for 3 years. If lat peaks in 7 years before it starts heading downhill and assuming acceptable quality at 10. Doing out that math, theoretically a lat blend could be be smokeable for 50 years if vacuum sealed in glass, of course, assuming you could maintain the vacuum on the jar. I'm curious if all the assumptions could actually hold true.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ZeroContent, post: 458734, member: 1367"] I think you're missing my question that if vacuum sealed in glass would it extend that time. According to GLP, tobacco stored in a vacuum seal glass jar showed little signs of ageing after 3 years which sounds to me like at least a 20% ageing speed over 3 years. At that rate it would take 15 years in the vacuum jar to reach the age of a tobacco just put into the jar like normal for 3 years. If lat peaks in 7 years before it starts heading downhill and assuming acceptable quality at 10. Doing out that math, theoretically a lat blend could be be smokeable for 50 years if vacuum sealed in glass, of course, assuming you could maintain the vacuum on the jar. I'm curious if all the assumptions could actually hold true. [/QUOTE]
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If Vacuum Sealing Stops Aging Does It Stop Lat Degradation?
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