Anyone have a source for Nebula Haze Fluid? I'm down to less than a bottle left. The unit is still in working condition, and we would really like to keep using it.
i have a couple bottles, and my nebula is in pieces... not sure if i want to get rid of them or not, as I may eventually fix it (got a source for nebulizer stems? i have a broken one).
I spoke a while back with the guys at Froggy's Fog about making a copy fluid. I believe it's something like 70-80% Tri-Ethylene Glycol and the rest DI water. The person I talked to a Froggy's (Adam Pogue) said he could make it, but that he doesn't normally use TEG because of it's odor.
From an article on glycol concentrations, I found:
"High End Systems has modified its fog fluid formulas to make them produce a longer-lasting effect while using less fluid. "If you can make a machine that uses the slower-evaporating glycols in a better way, then perhaps you don't need to put as much in the air for the same level of haze," explains High End Systems' vice president of engineering Mike Wood. "That was the intent [with the Nebula]." The Nebula machine made a fine haze of triethylene glycol or PEG 200, two glycols that evaporate very slowly. In contrast, propylene glycol, another popular component of fog fluids, "evaporates almost immediately, so you have to keep pumping it out there to keep anything going at all," says Wood."
So with that information, froggy's was going to make some for me... then my nebula broke...
i have a couple bottles, and my nebula is in pieces... not sure if i want to get rid of them or not, as I may eventually fix it (got a source for nebulizer stems? i have a broken one).
I spoke a while back with the guys at Froggy's Fog about making a copy fluid. I believe it's something like 70-80% Tri-Ethylene Glycol and the rest DI water. The person I talked to a Froggy's (Adam Pogue) said he could make it, but that he doesn't normally use TEG because of it's odor.
From an article on glycol concentrations, I found:
"High End Systems has modified its fog fluid formulas to make them produce a longer-lasting effect while using less fluid. "If you can make a machine that uses the slower-evaporating glycols in a better way, then perhaps you don't need to put as much in the air for the same level of haze," explains High End Systems' vice president of engineering Mike Wood. "That was the intent [with the Nebula]." The Nebula machine made a fine haze of triethylene glycol or PEG 200, two glycols that evaporate very slowly. In contrast, propylene glycol, another popular component of fog fluids, "evaporates almost immediately, so you have to keep pumping it out there to keep anything going at all," says Wood."
So with that information, froggy's was going to make some for me... then my nebula broke...