teflon tape fills gaps very nicely, and molds itself into whatever space is available. The rear-view mirror on my '84 car was loose, rattling, and un-repairable, so I wrapped a bunch of teflon tape around the base where it connects to the car. It took quite a bit of tape, but it worked very well, no wobble. Gail On 12 /09/08 , at 02 /04/09, 11:44 AM, Britt Griswold wrote: > The Smithsonian uses glass lids held in place with the traditional > fruit canning mechanism: a rubber gasket and a pressure seal > applied with the metal lever lock. Though the teflon covered > threads sounds promising... > > Britt > > Bruce Bartrug wrote: >> Catherine Bursh wrote: >> On the tape subject.... Anyone know the correct tape to use to >> seal the >> lids of specimen jars with alcohol in them? I'm tempted to use black >> electrical tape but not sure if the alcohol fumes will mess with the >> glue on the tape. >> The purpose of the tape is to slow the evaporation that takes >> place even >> with a threaded top. >> Catherine, I have two suggestions for you -- neither of which, >> however, I've actually tested for the purpose you indicated. >> The first is teflon plumbers' tape. Which is not really tape per >> se (it has no adhesive) but is simply a thin film of a very inert >> and useful material. One wraps the tape on the threads to be >> sealed and tightens the lid. Very good at sealing the slightest >> leaks, even in gas lines. I used it many decades ago to seal >> brass joints in gas lines for chromatographs -- a instrument used >> to analyse chemical substances. Try to find some wide enough to >> fit the threads in question. >> The second is a type of seal used to seal lids of packaged >> chemicals. It's a circular sleeve of shrink-wrap type material >> that one positions around a jar or bottle lid and then shrinks >> with a hair-dryer. >> As I said, I've not tested these specifically for the application >> you've mentioned, but I strongly suspect using both would >> significantly reduce alcohol evaporation from a speciman >> container. I'm suspecting you're already using glass jars and >> metal lids? >> /Suerte/, >> Bruce Gail W. Guth Guth Illustration & Design 139 Lathrop Avenue Battle Creek, MI 49014-5076 269-963-1311 FAX: 269-969-0652 www.guthillustration.com