Yep. There's practically no synthetic material that has good resistance to all solvents. It's reassuring that chemistry grad students are surprised when nitrile gloves are attacked by acetone and don't know why low boiling point and high vapor pressure liquids feel cold when they get spread on your skin and exposed to air.
(Phase change from liquid to gas requires energy; this is sucking the heat right out of your skin.)
;;;
And don't worry, Christoff, everyone on the forum knows I am a bit off, at times, when it comes to social interaction. Some are sure I'm just full of myself.
One of the biggest recurring problems I find in our education and understanding of our own knowledge is... You take 100 intelligent and highly educated people who aren't accountants, and not a single one will believe he understands the tax codes of their country/state/city. These 100 highly intelligent and educated people who aren't biologists, and not a single one will think they know how mitochondria work and replicate. But you take 100 highly educated people of any field, and 99 of them believe they understand physics. They think Newton and Boyle etc. just wrote all that stuff down so you can calculate stuff. But that the main gist is obvious and intuitive, and they get it. But 98 of them are wrong. They carry incorrect connections/assumption in their mind, which they formed at a time when their view was limited, and which worked well enough to get them this far. At a certain age, those bad connections will never be fixed.
Not necessarily talking about you, and I'm sorry, Christoff. You can post mean response w/e, and I don't care. Will not respond. I deserve it for being a twat.