ResolvableOwl
Notorious Lyear
@bookworm
Oof, what a mess! Nearly sounds like a wax spill. If I had to choose between cleaning up a wax spill or a lye spill, I'd decide for the lye .
Was this PKO the variant with natural composition (refined/RBD), or hydrogenated (āPKO flakesā)? The non-hydrogenated PKO behaves almost identical to coconut oil (i. e. it fully melts on skin and causes a strong cooling sensation). I haven't worked with hydrogenated PKO yet, but from the data sheets, at 40Ā°C any type of PKO should be a clear, freely running liquid .
In any case, lauric oils (PKO, CO, babaƧu), used at moderate percentages (20% or less), are rarely the culprit when it comes to false trace (hampering swirls etc.). It takes a lot of heat energy to break up their molecular crystal structure (hence the stubborn melting & cooling effect!), and this energy keeps (at least should keep) the molecules from forming a solid again any time quickly, especially when there are other fat molecules (soft oils) in the way.
Do you have some dirty scrap PKO left over (or some of the salvaged stuff to spare)? You could, e. g. blend it 1:2 with some liquid oil, just to play around with it, observe the melting behaviour of PKO-containing oil blends, and gain self-confidence in handling this stuff.
I myself never had acceleration issues with PKO (neither with CO).
Oof, what a mess! Nearly sounds like a wax spill. If I had to choose between cleaning up a wax spill or a lye spill, I'd decide for the lye .
Was this PKO the variant with natural composition (refined/RBD), or hydrogenated (āPKO flakesā)? The non-hydrogenated PKO behaves almost identical to coconut oil (i. e. it fully melts on skin and causes a strong cooling sensation). I haven't worked with hydrogenated PKO yet, but from the data sheets, at 40Ā°C any type of PKO should be a clear, freely running liquid .
In any case, lauric oils (PKO, CO, babaƧu), used at moderate percentages (20% or less), are rarely the culprit when it comes to false trace (hampering swirls etc.). It takes a lot of heat energy to break up their molecular crystal structure (hence the stubborn melting & cooling effect!), and this energy keeps (at least should keep) the molecules from forming a solid again any time quickly, especially when there are other fat molecules (soft oils) in the way.
Do you have some dirty scrap PKO left over (or some of the salvaged stuff to spare)? You could, e. g. blend it 1:2 with some liquid oil, just to play around with it, observe the melting behaviour of PKO-containing oil blends, and gain self-confidence in handling this stuff.
I myself never had acceleration issues with PKO (neither with CO).