Jesus wrote:Thanks, Squirrelhead.
Boomr, wow, did you remember to CLOSE the cooler? Just kidding, but seriously, which of the many ideas folks have shared for making the dry ice last longer (if any) did you adopt?
In your test, you didn't mention taking any extra steps, or what kind of cooler you got, just that it was an Igloo maxcool, which means nothing, as Igloo makes maxcold coolers that are thin soft-sided bags just for day trips, and maxcold coolers with very thick insulation.
My dry ice lasted a long time, keeping multiple coolers of stuff cold/frozen, depending, and I got much, much less than you.
Tricky wrote:I'll bring a cooler full of frozen 1 gallon plastic Milk Jugs. If they're filled about 3/4 or 2/3 with water when they freeze they should expand but not burst. I will then black a sheet of dry ice in that same cooler, this will keep all of those frozen gallons frozen. Each day I'll take one of those frozen gallons into the other cooler in which I'll keep food & drinks. Over the course of that day that 1 gallon of ice will keep the cooler cool and thaw into on gallon of Ice water for the next morning.
The next day I'll fill my camel back etc with this ice water and place another frozen jug in the food cooler. This process worked perfectly! Always had Ice water, never needed to fill the food cooler with ice which of course kept all the food contained with-in dry, and that one piece of dry ice lasted the whole week, as the cooler containing it was opened only once a day!!!
solemnraven wrote:Tricky wrote:I'll bring a cooler full of frozen 1 gallon plastic Milk Jugs. If they're filled about 3/4 or 2/3 with water when they freeze they should expand but not burst. I will then black a sheet of dry ice in that same cooler, this will keep all of those frozen gallons frozen. Each day I'll take one of those frozen gallons into the other cooler in which I'll keep food & drinks. Over the course of that day that 1 gallon of ice will keep the cooler cool and thaw into on gallon of Ice water for the next morning.
The next day I'll fill my camel back etc with this ice water and place another frozen jug in the food cooler. This process worked perfectly! Always had Ice water, never needed to fill the food cooler with ice which of course kept all the food contained with-in dry, and that one piece of dry ice lasted the whole week, as the cooler containing it was opened only once a day!!!
this...is pretty genius.
bryozoan wrote: So, what I have been taught is to take a few pounds of dry ice, which will look very small, and place it 4-5 inches of water ice. Then cover that with 5-6 inches of water ice. You may even want to spray a little water on the ice to make a more perfect seal (the dry ice will freeze it). My biggest problem is if you don't use enough water ice, the dry ice will still freeze your stuff through the water ice.
FIGJAM wrote:It was "Once upon a time", don't know why it got changed.
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