Sorry to revive this antique thread, but I have a quick newbie question about thermometers...
I have this old Stansi mercury thermometer (Germany), 30 cm long, with a yellow line background, rated from -20C to 110C, with an eyelet at the end to
hang. Looking at the back, it does have a mark about 2/3 of the way up, right next to the brand name.
That means that when I use the thermometer, I must push it down the rubber stopper so that 2/3 of the body is inside the vessel, right?
It doesn't matter if it's in the liquid or just above it... it just has to be right at that mark on the stopper, correct?
I have been using a digital thermometer ever since i've started my home chemistry endeavors and it's fairly accurate (boiling distilled water at about
102C, hey, I paid ten bucks for it!) but for some experiments where the liquid will be boiling for a long time, I decided to pull out this old
thermomether which I really never used, and I just want to set it up right.
The vessels I'll be using are a 3-neck 250ml boiling flask or a 1L erlenmeyer flask with a 3-hole rubber stopper.
Robert
P.S.: After googling a bit, I learned that Stansi was purchased by Fisher Scientific in 1967, so yeah, it's a vintage thermometer, probably older than
my miserable old carcass... LOL
--- Art is making something out of nothing and selling it. - Frank Zappa ---
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