hi all, i know this has been discussed before but i'm still unsure. i read through a previous thread and it wasn't conclusive, so i thought i would canvas some opinions. also, i'm not a chemist, and that sort of thing goes straight over my head, just interested in people views.
i was going out on a day hike with a mate, he was using a sigg bottle, obviously a popular choice. i was filling up my 44 pattern water bottle, which is alu, and he came out with 2 comments,
"i like the design"
"is it safe?"
now the last bit i passed of with the usual stock answer, "don't be so silly, of course it is, army used them for years!"
that got me thinking for part of the day about whether it actually was safe!? the army have gradually phased them out, and now only the mess tins remain as alu kit, the bottles are now plastic, and the cups stainless. do they know something we don't?
is it cost? survivability?
the US scrapped metal bottles decades ago also, but i not sure if the cup is stainless? the dutch use a stainless version also.
so is it safe???? does leave a funny taste in the contents sometimes. what do you think?
i was going out on a day hike with a mate, he was using a sigg bottle, obviously a popular choice. i was filling up my 44 pattern water bottle, which is alu, and he came out with 2 comments,
"i like the design"
"is it safe?"
now the last bit i passed of with the usual stock answer, "don't be so silly, of course it is, army used them for years!"
that got me thinking for part of the day about whether it actually was safe!? the army have gradually phased them out, and now only the mess tins remain as alu kit, the bottles are now plastic, and the cups stainless. do they know something we don't?
is it cost? survivability?
the US scrapped metal bottles decades ago also, but i not sure if the cup is stainless? the dutch use a stainless version also.
so is it safe???? does leave a funny taste in the contents sometimes. what do you think?