Paul: I use quartz tube inserts and find that occasionally they stick a bit. This happens mostly when the thicker-walled quartz reaction tubes (pre-made ones) are used. When I prepare my own reaction tubes, I buy the slightly thinner-walled quartz for the reaction tube and usually have no sticking problems. I too put a small quartz wool plug at the bottom of the ash tube and, of course, there is quartz wool at the top of the reactor tube. This prevents most problems. But in case of sticking, I have a thick piece of steel wire with a short bend at the end. Wire must be thin enough to fit through the slits but thick enough not to soften too quickly in the oven. I use this to move down inside the tube and hook into one of the slits. I can usually pull them out this way. Very simple and takes seconds to remove and replace. The only caveat is that you have to make sure the wire doesn't sit in there too long or it starts to soften. But even then you can just pull it back out, cool, rebend, try again. I've never had one that I couldn't get out. I also follow Lola's protocol and change after each run. When running sulfur as I often do, this is critical and so it's just routine for me. And I also clean then out and try to reuse them if I can. The wire is handy for that too. --Alison ________________________________ Alison Pye . [log in to unmask] Stable Isotope Lab Coordinator CREAIT . TERRA Facility . Stable Isotope Lab Alexander Murray Building Memorial University of Newfoundland St. John's, NL . Canada . A1B 3X5 ph: (709) 737-3217 . fax: (709) 737-2589 -----Original Message----- From: Stable Isotope Geochemistry [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Paul Eby Sent: February 26, 2009 3:33 PM To: Alison Pye Subject: ash tubes Listmembers, I've been having trouble with ash tubes from our EA breaking lately. We use Elemental Microanalysis C1090, which is open both ends and has slits on the bottom half. I have a small bit of quartz wool at the bottom of the tube, and at the top of the reactor. Typically, the tube is stuck when I try to remove it, and breaks near the top of the ash level when I force it. This occurs regardless of whether I am at full temperature or standby temperature, and I have had the same trouble with tubes that are closed at the bottom. My best guess is that the slag is seeping through the slits and fusing to the reactor tube. Does anyone have any applicable wisdom? I'm considering the vacuum removal method at this point.... Paul Eby University of Victoria