I've been thinking (could be dangerous) ...
When I measure the pro-seal on the kitchen scale real careful-like ... especially when I'm mixing up a small blob ... say 10g ... it doesn't come out real consistant.
How do I know the mix is bad? First the color is off (too light or too dark), and then the stuff sets up much slower than usual, or much faster than usual.
If I mixed up a big batch ... say 1 lb ... the measurement errors would be negligable, and the mix would work out great ... but, suppose I
want a little blob ...
Why not use
color instead of weight to fine-tune the mix ratio? My eye is not very good at judging an absolute color, but, I can compare two samples and see the difference pretty easily. So, if I compare a new batch that I'm mixing to a sample of properly mixed pro-seal I can duplicate the shade of gray pretty well. I think this works 'cause the color of the pro-seal doesn't seem to change much as it sets.
Here's the best part

... all those smears and blobs of pro-seal all over the work bench ... well, they aren't a mess ... now they are my mixing guage!
So, here's how I mix up a small blob of pro-seal ... I use the scale and put about 10g white and about 1g (maybe a little less) black ... I mix it up real good ... then I hold it up to one of my reference smears on the bench (or a finished seam someplace) ... if it doesn't look right, I add a bit more of white or black (usually black).
This seems to work for me. Dispite my wordy explanation, it's actually faster and easier this way than trying to get super-acurate weights on the scale. And, I think I'm mixing the stuff much more consistanly now.
What do y'all think? Are my tanks gonna fall apart?

LooseNut