200 hours is not going to be long enough life for commerical use. Needs to be like 20,000 hours.
#2 | POSTED BY SNOOFY
Did you even read the article? Do you understand what and why the material breaksdown?
but notice they don't mention which bacteria or how common it is.
Its an article not a scientific paper, its not petroleum based, its a polylactic acid, it doesn't break down into microplastic.
And very little is truly recycled.
Depends upon your definition of recycled.
Just a hint for success, but this thread shows you guys need to read and understand more before you post.
Totally ignoring, among other things, the Jim Crow era?
#12 | POSTED BY LAMPLIGHTER
When was that? and Who perpetrated it?
GasLighter has never heard of the "Jim Crow Democrats"