It's hard to go wrong with N24. I slightly prefer 24/40 for adapters and 24/29 for flasks. Generally, an apparatus constructed entirely with 24/40
joints is more stable and requires less joint grease, but 24/29 joints are easier to get apart when stuck. 24/xx is generally compatible with other
24/xx, although you may encounter some occasional off pieces on things like non-addition sep funnels. 24/29 is generally the cheapest, and the flask
sizes can be anywhere from 25 mL to 10 L and probably larger or smaller (so you can do reactions on a 2.5 mL scale or a 5 L scale).
My largest flask is 3 L, and I have considered obtaining something larger, but that's big enough for most tasks that I want to do as a hobbyist. 2 L
is probably big enough for almost everything, really... once in a while I want to do something in extremely dilute conditions and wish I had
bucket-size flasks and tanker trucks of solvent, but usually it is pretty easy to scale things down as long as the quantities aren't so tiny that you
can't avoid massive mechanical losses. There are things that I use 20 L buckets for, and if I had massive flasks, I would probably use them, but I'm
not even sure where I would store something like that....
I use 14/10 microscale glassware with screw fittings for the really small stuff. It is largely compatible with 14/20, and I use 14/20 replacement
parts when possible since they are much cheaper than 14/10.
I have noticed that most of the top-notch YouTube chemists (in particular, Nile Red, Nurdrage, and Chem Player) use a range of joint sizes with
adapters. I think Doug's Lab belongs in that echelon also, and he seems to use mainly N24 (pretty sure UC235 did too).
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