They work, but the ziplock seal could use some improvement. You just have to be careful that the bag is sealed. As with any other container, as you handle the sealed bag with smelly hands, you will leave that contamination on the surface.
Not sure, but this is probably not cool to discuss on...
Charcoal will absorb smells. This would be activated charcoal. Best seal is a glass Mason jar and lid, sealed tight, then bleached. Bleach destroys organic molecules, hence no molecules to smell. Most smells that are detected come from re-contamination of the outside surface of a package...
Airtight is not smell tight was my point. A baggie is airtight but the smell passes through pretty quickly. Seems paradoxical, but it is so. Smelly Bags are made from the plastic you'd cook a turkey in. They hold the smell very well and I use them all the time
Carlos, those look cool, but unless there's a special plastic liner, smell will get out. A plastic sandwich baggie is water tight but stinks like crazy. Hence the need for a special plastic liner.
I wish there was a case that looked like an eyeglass case but had a liner and simple gasket system when closed. Won't stop a dog but would keep smell from humans
I understand that this issue may be caused by an ever so slight amount of vapor with oils depositing on this switch. Mechanically moving it with a paper clip side to side is supposed to free it. The reason Iso makes this worse may be due to the iso dissolving a tiny bit of air-deposited resin...
Seems the consensus is to pry around the button to release it. I don't believe any changes have been made to prevent this, but the advice is to clean when hot and avoid Iso in that area.