Aargh! I am supremely frustrated!
Okay, so I made another batch of balms yesterday using a lip balm base. I let the base cool to around 115 degrees again before pouring. I used a balm pouring tray, and, with a steady hand, I slowly poured the balm into each tube to reduce air pockets. I let the tray of balms sit for about three hours before I even took them out of the tray and cleaned the tops. I then capped them and left them alone for about 24 hours.
When I went to test them today to see if they advanced okay, 19 of the 33 were duds again (the final dud count from the previous batch turned out to be 20 out of 30 instead of 6 out of 30 - don't know why 14 of them seemed okay and then weren't). Most refused to advance at all (the twisty thing just spun in my fingers again), and a few did advance but separated from the plunger apparatus during retraction. (I didn't advance it all that far, either - just enough to make sure it worked.) I guess I could use balm pots instead of tubes, but I prefer tubes.
What am I doing wrong? Is it me, or is it my tubes?
I don't think I'm going to get into lip balms if they're going to cause me this much trouble and expense. Plus, I would worry about the product not performing as it should every time I sold one!
I'm interested in making lotions, too, but the potential for microbes and nasties has me freaked. Pfft, I think I'll just stick to soaping!
Any idea what the deal is with my balms? Thanks for any insights!