Thanks Woody! Was having a hell of a time with some Cetol that has sat for a about six wks while i was in Africa. I think this coat will last a few years as it did not flow well..Was sitting in the cockpit with a decent glass o wine and had this thought. Even though all gases are inert, thought id ask. Amazing that all Rodda and Sherwin Williams could come up with was "saran wrap"...Helium...thats a different thread!
wine and paint are two different products and go bad in different ways...
i know wine will keep much longer without any oxygen available, but something like paint, varnish, caulking, ect, "cures" by a different process...
but no, I dont really know how the paint/varnish/caulking cure will be inhibited in the presence of any of the above mentioned "inert" gases, but I think it wouldnt care so much and harden up anyway...
I believe the curing or skinning over to be more caused by the "head space" available in the can above the paint.
I think we probably have all experienced the remaining small amount of product in the can skinning over or curing a bit beyond the point of further use....
but if you had several partial cans and combined them all together, and put the lid on it securely, it will keep for a couple years or more on the shelf.....
it is my thought, that using the saran wrap is placing a barrier/cap between the product and the empty head space.... thereby effectively removing any head space.
its only an opinion based on my experience, and is open for discussion
