As a retiree, my grandfather worked for a small town grocery making Swedish meatballs. At some point in 1990 or 1991 he decided to encase one in epoxy.
It's been passed around the family as a gag gift ever since, and I just re-discovered it visiting family last weekend. I'm kind of amazed it hasn't turned green by now.
I'm wondering how long something like this would last encased like that? Forever? Will whatever's inside ever slowly seep out somehow or will the epoxy eventually crack?
throbbing_banjo on June 15th, 2021 at 02:56 UTC »
As a retiree, my grandfather worked for a small town grocery making Swedish meatballs. At some point in 1990 or 1991 he decided to encase one in epoxy.
It's been passed around the family as a gag gift ever since, and I just re-discovered it visiting family last weekend. I'm kind of amazed it hasn't turned green by now.
jwill602 on June 15th, 2021 at 03:05 UTC »
Damn… spoiler alert. I guess I can unfollow the hot dog now
pngwyn1cc on June 15th, 2021 at 03:53 UTC »
I'm wondering how long something like this would last encased like that? Forever? Will whatever's inside ever slowly seep out somehow or will the epoxy eventually crack?