Jump to content

How biodegradable are bio BBs?


DanBow
 Share

This thread is over three months old. Please be sure that your post is appropriate as it will revive this otherwise old (and possibly forgotten) topic.

Recommended Posts

I have a 3d printer that uses PLA filament. Even though the filament is made from all organic ingredients, it's only biodegradable in very specific circumstances, involving heat and pressure. So not biodegradable at all really. 

As Bio BBs are made from PLA are they the same, not biodegradable? Is it just a marketing thing to make landowners feel like they're being good?

 

Or are BBs different?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There is a site I use that only allow bio and from what I have seen the bbs swell up to about 10mm and become crumbly. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As I understand it the biodegradable label is a bit misleading. They will decompose but need a hot environment so compostable would be a better description. UV light will also cause PLA to break down so sunlight will help

Edited by Cannonfodder
Typo
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Supporters
2 hours ago, Shamal said:

There is a site I use that only allow bio and from what I have seen the bbs swell up to about 10mm and become crumbly. 

 

Hmm, interesting.  I've not seen swollen BBs at my local "bio" sites, I wonder if there's specific environmental or brand issues at play.

 

Previous research (it's on here somewhere, I can't find the magic search phrase) suggests that PLA will completely break down in an industrial composter in about 6 months, but out in the open, we're talking hundreds of years (rather than thousands for ABS).  Granted, small spheres with a large surface area should help, but posters here reported no appreciable degrading over months in plant-pot experiments.  I've had 0.43g BBs just start to crack on the surface under pressure after 2 years of garage storage.

 

Something I'd note is that 5.95mm of pure PLA would mass about 0.2g.  Anything heavier must be adulterated with something else, e.g. ceramic or metal.  When you get into 0.4g and above, the claim that we're slinging "plastic" starts to become rather suspect.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, DanBow said:

I have a 3d printer that uses PLA filament. Even though the filament is made from all organic ingredients, it's only biodegradable in very specific circumstances, involving heat and pressure. So not biodegradable at all really. 

As Bio BBs are made from PLA are they the same, not biodegradable? Is it just a marketing thing to make landowners feel like they're being good?

 

Or are BBs different?

It doesn’t mean something isn’t biodegradable, it just means a lack of awareness of what biodegrade is and the general use of the term to mean degradable

 

If it requires light then it’s degradable but not biodegradable and is also unsuitable for the woods

If it degrades underground, then once trodden in it will eventually degrade

 

Depending on the fine print and to what standards it’s defined deems how suitable it is for a site

 

If micro plastics are left then strictly speaking it should not be called biodegradable in the UK (I’m unsure if that’s in the legal parts of the standards or just a ‘should’

In that case any ‘biodegradable’ BB is better left as plastic in the ground then just plastic which could expose micro plastics into the environment 

 

Or of course play paintball and leave food grade gels in the woods instead

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, Rogerborg said:

 

Hmm, interesting.  I've not seen swollen BBs at my local "bio" sites, I wonder if there's specific environmental or brand issues at play.

 

Previous research (it's on here somewhere, I can't find the magic search phrase) suggests that PLA will completely break down in an industrial composter in about 6 months, but out in the open, we're talking hundreds of years (rather than thousands for ABS).  Granted, small spheres with a large surface area should help, but posters here reported no appreciable degrading over months in plant-pot experiments.  I've had 0.43g BBs just start to crack on the surface under pressure after 2 years of garage storage.

 

Something I'd note is that 5.95mm of pure PLA would mass about 0.2g.  Anything heavier must be adulterated with something else, e.g. ceramic or metal.  When you get into 0.4g and above, the claim that we're slinging "plastic" starts to become rather suspect.

It was my first time at camouflage Airsoft Bournemouth and I kept  seeing these large white mouldy looking balls and asked a regular player who told me they were the bio bbs. 🤔

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

46 minutes ago, Shamal said:

It was my first time at camouflage Airsoft Bournemouth and I kept  seeing these large white mouldy looking balls and asked a regular player who told me they were the bio bbs. 🤔

 

Was that a euphemism he shared with you whilst you were in the toilets 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Remember finding some bio BBs that I shot into the garden a couple of years ago.  They had gone yellowy and brittle.  They crumbled if you pinched them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Supporters
4 hours ago, Sewdhull said:

I was under the impression PLA was biodegradable.

 

It is, it's a question of how quickly.  I'd seen tens of years, but that could be for big lumps of the stuff, not ickle balls. It's heartening to hear that people are seeing it break down already, I'll have a closer look next time I'm on site.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This thread is over three months old. Please be sure that your post is appropriate as it will revive this otherwise old (and possibly forgotten) topic.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...