Whoa! A cc and a milliter are identical in volume when measured at the defined temperature of foru cegrees Celsius.
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Another Happy Linux User Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2004 10:40 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: ShopTalk: Grips and compressed air A CC (cubic Centimeter), is 10 ml (ten Milli-Liters) In simple terms, what I first said (mistakenly) was to use about a tablespoon or more of solvent, which is way more than I meant to say. Just a half a teaspoon is enough. If one uses too much, it doesn't harm anything, except, that the extra will spray out from the grip, and "all over the place", maybe even into your eyes. Bad..... But just a bit, and depending on what you use as a "protector", that should not be an issue. I always recommend using protective goggles when using compressed air. On a side note, - Someone (sorry I don't remember the name) on the list had suggested using one of these tiny air compressors for this job. I have not tried it, (my system is already set up), - but it sounds like an *excellent* idea! You get the pressure you need, but at low volume. I will in all likelyhood, change my system to use something like that later. A foot switch to control the compressor, might make things even better. Hope I answered your question satisfactorily. Cheers, Jorgen [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Wednesday 24 March 2004 06:50 am, Tom Barnett wrote: > Just for the record what is the difference between cc's and ml's ? >
