Cecil is mistaken, coke does not disolve aluminum

If anything were going to happen, it’d happen a lot more quickly out on the countertop than in the freezer. Almost all chemical reactions proceed more slowly when cold.

As for tomato sauce and aluminum foil, I understand that that’s actually an electrolytic process, with two different metals and an acid forming a crude battery. So if you have lasagna in a steel pan covered with aluminum foil, it’ll corrode, but if you have it in an aluminum (or glass) pan, you only have one kind of metal, so no battery, so no corrosion.

Wait. You were smoking joints while doing the experiment. What kind of scientist are you?:slight_smile:

Takes the edge off the excitement of discovery. :cool:

Is there enough dissolved metal in tomato sauce to support electrolysis?

True, but the 1982 article appeared in the original Straight Dope book and seems to be what the author of the 1997 letter is referring to.

It’s already been said, but Coke is weak stuff. The phosphoric acid might attack bones (it doesn’t seem to react much with soft tissues), but it’s such a low concentration that it probably isn’t worth mentioning. Citric acid is recognized as a safe food additive, and carbonic acid is a function of carbonating the water and disappears as the Coke goes flat.

I regularly use a fairly accurate 0-5.0 (or somesuch) indicator paper at work. I’ll grab some strips on Monday, a few cans, and play mythbuster.

All of the myths about Coca Cola dissolving a nail, penny etc. are bullshit. Coke does not dissolve aluminum, I proved it. End of story until someone finds out what the hell Coca-Cola will dissolve, if anything.

Were’s the thing: You don’t get to end the story. :wink:
I’m 63, and this “nail” thing has been around forever. You gotta roll with it.

Please explain to me carefully and in English what your post means. Unless you made a typo and instead of “Were’s”, you meant “Here’s”, in which case you are suggesting we fight for ignorance.

Yep, typo. S/B “here’s the thing”. Everything else stands. As typed.
You said “end of story, etc”. I said “you can’t do that”.
Clear now? Sorry I didn’t preview. Is there such a thing as “were’s”?