Dear David, Further to my earlier message off list, yes, it is absolutely essential to back out the column at 300 C for at least 12 hours. Anything lower temperature-wise is a waste of time of helium. Equally essential is isolating the source during bake-out (needle-valve) and to increase the carrier gas pressure. In addition, I strongly recommend to switch on the source and inlet heaters as well as the diluter since the bake-out will release of lot crap from the column, especially if for whatever reasons air got into the system at some stage or time. After the bake-out, keep heaters and diluter on for a while longer to avoid "condensation" of bake-out eluents. Cheers, Wolfram On Dec 17 2004, David Harris wrote: > Thanks for all the ideas. Its looks like 90% of the problem has been > solved by changing the molecular sieve GC column for a new one. I still > have some tailing but much improved. I had baked out the old column in > two overnight sessions at 250 C, it looks like this is not enough, at > least not to recover the old column. The GC oven I use on this system can > only just reach 250 C, it may be that I will need to use a different oven > that will reach at least 300 C to properly bake out these columns. It may > also be that the slight residual tailing I still see is because this new > column may also need further bakeout before it is fully functional.