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Re: [ccp4bb] crystal shipping at room temperature |
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CCP4bb navigationCCP4bb <-- 1999 <-- November 1999 <-- 30 November 1999Subject: Re: crystal shipping at room temperature From: Juergen Bosch jbosch {- at -} U {- dot -} WASHINGTON {- dot -} EDU Date: 2007-05-28 Hi Junhua, you should contact TSA in Houston, speak to them prior to your flight arrange a contact person who will be there when you are traveling. Send them a Fax explaining what and why you are carrying your crystals with you and how e.g. small cooler with pads etc. I carried some RT 96 well trays from Seattle to the Berkeley and Stanford in 2004/2005 without troubles. Now things might have changed again with the "3 once liquid rule". It might also help if you have an "American" take care of your crystals during the flight. People with visa's might be too suspicious. Main point plan ahead and speak to the authorities. I wouldn't trust Fedex with RT crystals. Or drive them yourself to Chicago (2 days ?). Jürgen Junhua Pan wrote: >Dear all, > >Sorry for the non CCP4 questions. We would like to ship some virus crystals to a synchrotron at room temperature (for room temperature diffraction). I am wondering if anybody has ever had any good experience for this kind of shipping. Especially, it would be great if anybody has any good ideas other than pre-mounting the crystals in quartz capillaries (I won't be driving from Houston to Chicago though :D). I would also like to know more about the things that I need to pay extra attention to, if I have to deal with capillaries. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. > >I'm now testing the more convenient MiTeGen MicroMounts. However, I am not sure whether the crystals can remain resting on the MicroMounts aperture during the course of a typical Fedex shipping (according to the MicroMounts instruction sheet, crystals should not be trapped in the aperture). It would be great if anybody would share your previous experience with regard to the MiTeGen stuff. > >Another question about the MiTeGen mounting tools is that I always observe a stong diffraction ring at about 5 A. Well, it is not exactly a ring; it's actually two thick arches (pretty thick, roughly from 5.5 A to 4.8 A), one at the top and the other at the bottom of the diffraction patterns (nothing on the left-hand or right-hand side). Does anybody have any idea what this might be (fiber?)? > >thanks a lot for your help! > >Junhua >--- >Junhua Pan >Department of Biochemistry & Cell Biology >327 Keck Hall, Rice University >6100 Main Street MS-140 >Houston, TX 77005 >Phone: (713)348-3346 >Email: jhpan@rice.edu > > > -- Jürgen Bosch University of Washington Dept. of Biochemistry, K-426 1705 NE Pacific Street Seattle, WA 98195 Box 357742 Phone: +1-206-616-4510 FAX: +1-206-685-7002 CCP4bb navigationCCP4bb <-- 1999 <-- November 1999 <-- 30 November 1999 |
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