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Anyone else put months and year on items before using?

Comments

24 comments

  • Ditch-Runner

    Any thing going into the freezer we seal it and date it . That's about it

    9
  • jimdeere

    My wife does.

    0
  • Rocky Raab

    I've begun doing that, too. I date the battery in my toothbrush, and all kinds of other expendable things. I had a CFL bulb burning in my garage 24/7. I had dated it with the day and month, thinking it MIGHT last six months. Darn thing lasted for years before it finally went out.

    I'm just curious how long some things last is all - and can never remember when I installed them.

    3
  • Ruger4me

    I date the bills when I pay them…

    3
  • waltermoe

    I even put a date on the salt tank for the water softener when I fill it with salt, lasts about two months. Every time I fill the car with gas I reset the trip meter, I don’t trust gas gauges.
    I know now that’s it’s not just me, dating things. It’s true then; great minds think alike.

    3
  • Rocky Raab

    Checking the salt tank is one of my "oneth of the month" checklist items, along with the furnace filters, computer updates and backups, smoke/CO alarms, and a few other items. My water softener uses a bag a month. I get three months on a filter (which I date), and my computer backups date themselves.

    3
  • 62vld2042

    Seems that the older I get........the more "stuff" I put dates on.

    It might be easier to list those items that I DON'T put dates on. There's even subheadings......."bought"......"open"........"in". Batteries is a good example.

    The list goes on and on.......bordering on obsessive/compulsive. Aging related??

    I do recall........while being much younger.......that there were few things needing to be dated. That's probably because I had so FEW things!!🤯

    6
  • Rocky Raab

    We oldsters probably think about time a lot because there's less of it left.

    3
  • dunbarboyz

    I don't want to know my expiration date.

    3
  • Locust Fork

    So smart….I need to start trying this!

    0
  • Merlinnv12

    I write on my gas welding bottles to see how long they last. I also write the date on my furnace when I change the filter.

    0
  • Rocky Raab

    Date the filter itself. Smarter.

    0
  • Merlinnv12

    Rocky, it’s easier to read the date on the outside of the furnace than it is on the filter after installation

    6
  • montanajoe
    • Community moderator
    Merlinnv12: 32607012977563/comments/32607058568091

    Rocky, it’s easier to read the date on the outside of the furnace than it is on the filter after installation

    Yep, quick glance and done. No need to open a panel everytime.

    0
  • Merlinnv12

    For sure, Joe. I hope Rocky put his address on the outside of his mailbox instead of the inside.😝😝

    9
  • Rocky Raab

    My filters have their edges exposed; they simply slide in. I made the assumption that yours were similar.

    3
  • Merlinnv12

    Well, you know what happens when you assume!

    0
  • hillbille

    I've put 40 years and few months on the wife, but I don't get to use her anymore…………..

    6
  • Ditch-Runner
    hillbille: 32607012977563/comments/32607044709659

    I've put 40 years and few months on the wife, but I don't get to use her anymore…………..

    Maybe the word " use " her may have caused it LOL

    I know but could not resist posting it

    0
  • Mobuck

    ammo, bottled water, gunpowder, chemical jugs, coffee containers, lots of other stuff

    When I buy something, I often buy a LOT of that something. Using older supply first just seems sensible and knowing the purchase date is necessary.

    3
  • 62vld2042
    montanajoe: 32607012977563/comments/32607052243099

    https://forums.gunbroker.com/discussion/comment/11458728#Comment_11458728

    Yep, quick glance and done. No need to open a panel everytime.

    I've got all three of you guys beat......but not necessarily in a good way.

    After I "build" my 48"x20" filter(a 25x20 and an 18x20), and date the end, I have to climb the garage attic stairs to the air handler. To avoid additional stair "trips".…...I also write the date, hours, and dirty filter condition on the back of my tool cabinet door at the bottom of the stairs. Years ago, with the warranty compressor replacement, the company gave us a new thermostat. One of the t-stat functions, is to count hours of blower operation. I've set it for 900 hours(which gives me an approximately 80% "used" filter every time).......before it signals "change filter".

    Unfortunately.…......my lovely wife can also see the "change filter"...…and she's not one bit shy about letting me know..........repeatedly!!😖 Although, with advancing years, she insists on being home when I venture into the attic. Within hollering distance......

    The hour counter is worth it. Here, in North Texas, the 900 hours can be reached in 6 weeks in the middle of Summer............yet takes up to 4 months in Winter…......AND the filters always come out looking the same.

    I win anything?????🙃

    0
  • elubsme
    Ditch-Runner: 32607012977563/comments/32607013259547

    Any thing going into the freezer we seal it and date it . That's about it

    Ya' beat me to it!

    0
  • Ambrose

    Cans of gunpowder. Also, when I get a bill, I make out the check and then put the date it is to be mailed in the bottom left of the envelope (7 days before due). No point in paying earlier than that. I get a couple cents interest per month by not paying too early.

    6
  • yoshmyster

    Rocky Raab - I did the same with the CFL (the twisty light bulbs right?). I remember them "supposed to" last 10 years. So I dated them too. But I don't think they ever lasted 10 years. And that's just with 4-5 hours a day?

    3

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