if you keep them safe then yes
There are 153 rubber bands in a box (17 newspapers x 9 days = 153 rubber bands).
no because they'll go really brittle and will snap much easily
Although there were rubber bands made in the mid-19th century that were not vulcanized, they were not as flexible or as versatile as the ones that Stephen Perry began to mass-produce in England, using the vulcanized rubber developed by Goodyear. Rubber bands are not just to snap at your classmates. They come in all sizes and are used for bundling packages, holding back your hair, straightening your teeth, and exercising your muscles. The world's largest consumer of rubber bands is the United States Post Office. The resilient, elastic loops hold together bundles of mail, bouquets of flowers or stalks of celery. Tip: they last longer if you store them in the refrigerator. In 1845, Stephen Perry received a patent for the rubber band.
you cann braid your hair or you can get a criping iron
no it just makes them hard and fragile
It will get cold but it will also last longer
Me being a brace face knows your answer. We need rubber bands to help our teeth get in place. For the last five to six months they help keep your teeth straight so when you close your mouth they are all lined up nice and neat.
goodrich Charles Goodyear invented the process for making rubber that he named vulcanization. Goodrich then made the rubber last longer by adding carbon. Goodrich also invented synthetic rubber.
Rubber bands last longer if you put them in the fridge. "In all things, entropy is usually the boss, meaning, when things are at their most basic broken down state, they tend to last longer. And anything at a higher more complex state will tend to have a much shorter life span. Such is the same for a rubber band, when a rubber band is stretched it causes its polymer chains to become very ordered and it expels thermal energy (heat) thus shortening its life. But when a rubber band is in its relaxed state it is very unordered, and will cool when going from a structured state to a relaxed state. So when a rubber band is put in the refrigerator it makes the polymers even more relaxed, because of the way they behave in the cold. But something to be careful of is immediately stretching the rubber band after being in the fridge. This will cause it to weaken significantly because of the rapid change in the contrast of states.
they will last longer but are much more uncomfortable.
In most cases, the rubber. Especially if you don't plan on continually sharpening the pencil.
Older automatic transmissions had clutch "bands" that were adjustable when the transmission started to wear. Modern automatic transmissions do not have that option, but then, they tend to last a lot longer to make up for it.