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Ammo & Reloading
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<blockquote data-quote="TedKennedy" data-source="post: 2703262" data-attributes="member: 25419"><p>I deal with some pretty tightly controlled chemicals, and combine them as part of my job - so here's my take:</p><p></p><p>Lot number - that lot was manufactured using a combination of chemicals, each with it's own lot number and origin.</p><p></p><p>So, any variation from one of those ingredients can effect a change in the total lot. </p><p></p><p>Each chemical will have a set of "standards" or values it has to meet, in order to be accepted and used in production.</p><p></p><p>If a couple of ingredients are on the margin of acceptance, the resulting combination may affect the end (lot) product.</p><p></p><p>May not be a negative result, just different than a previous lot that used different lots of individual ingredients.</p><p></p><p>Quality control is very strict in this application, so major variances would be rare, IMHO.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TedKennedy, post: 2703262, member: 25419"] I deal with some pretty tightly controlled chemicals, and combine them as part of my job - so here's my take: Lot number - that lot was manufactured using a combination of chemicals, each with it's own lot number and origin. So, any variation from one of those ingredients can effect a change in the total lot. Each chemical will have a set of "standards" or values it has to meet, in order to be accepted and used in production. If a couple of ingredients are on the margin of acceptance, the resulting combination may affect the end (lot) product. May not be a negative result, just different than a previous lot that used different lots of individual ingredients. Quality control is very strict in this application, so major variances would be rare, IMHO. [/QUOTE]
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