Subject: Oddy test
As one of the people who did the early development work on the so-called Oddy test, I would like to reply to David Harvey's comments (Conservation DistList Instance: 14:50 Wednesday, March 28, 2001). First as an earlier correspondent said the test is a quick and dirty test. It is only meant to give a pass fail result. Yes a material is safe to use because it does not corrode the metal sample or no it is not safe to use because it does corrode the sample. The test is a simple derivative of a standard corrosion testing method. It is not true that there is not a standard test. After an exhaustive interlaboratory comparison my Conservation Research colleagues Lorna Green and David Thickett published a standard procedure, Testing materials for the storage and display of artefacts--a revised methodology, Studies in Conservation, 40, (3), 145-52. There have been several other methods of doing this test, or using completely different methodology to evaluate materials published by other workers. We use the Green and Thickett method and the only problems encountered have been those reported earlier in this list by my colleague Laurianne Robinet. The problem of poor laboratory working practice is not unique to conservators, and it is a problem which can be countered by proper training of staff and carefully following the written method. The idea that a material cannot be accepted for use on the basis of the test is rather scary. We do not experience false positive tests, but we probably do fail materials which would be safe to use in the construction of showcases, or storage units. This test is not suitable for the evaluation of conservation materials for which a more complex scientific methodology is needed. It is sometimes useful to know if a conservation material will cause damage to object substrates, but we would never ever recommend a material for use in the conservation of objects on the basis of the test. I agree that standard testing is needed in Conservation, and tried for many years during the 80s and early 90s with Yvonne Shashoua to get others interested in this. At that time it seemed that the BM scientists were the only group routinely testing conservation materials. If there is a move to produce standard reproducible tests we are certainly interested. Susan Bradley Head of Conservation Research Group Department of Conservation British Museum London WC1B 3DG +44 20 7323 8679 Fax: +44 20 7323-8636 *** Conservation DistList Instance 14:51 Distributed: Tuesday, April 3, 2001 Message Id: cdl-14-51-004 ***Received on Tuesday, 3 April, 2001