[sdiy] Cutting Wire to Length
cheater00 .
cheater00 at gmail.com
Wed Feb 26 12:33:48 CET 2014
Well, you should still keep it in a container so that the PDB doesn't
leak out. I wonder if that's carcirogenic due to prolonged exposure
etc. If you breathed it all day every day, probably just about
anything could give you cancer.
D.
On Wed, Feb 26, 2014 at 12:24 PM, Neil Johnson <neil.johnson71 at gmail.com> wrote:
> cheater00 . wrote:
>> I read that precisely paradichlorobenzene precludes any sort of oxides
>> building. I'm told people keep that stuff in tool boxes. This came up
>> on a thread where someone was complaining about their Craftsman tools
>> releasing butyric acid and smelling like puke. Apparently PDB masks
>> that quite well, which, among being inexpensive and preventing
>> corrosion is just one of its many virtues.
>
> Umm... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1,4-Dichlorobenzene
>
> "Under California's Proposition 65, p-DCB is listed as "known to the
> State to cause cancer"."
>
> Also: http://www.informinc.org/green_cleaning/respiratory_hazards_restroom_deodorant_blocks.pdf
>
> "Some restroom and urinal deodorant blocks contain paradichlorobenzene
> (p-dichlorobenzene, 1,4-dichlorobenzene, or "para"), a
> respiratory irritant that can trigger an asthma attack in a person who
> already has asthma. Exposure to paradichlorobenzene occurs
> primarily indoors, from products such as deodorant blocks and
> mothballs.1 Para persists in the environment, and the National
> Toxicology Program reports that it is reasonably anticipated to be a
> human carcinogen.2"
>
> Nice stuff. There's also the question of whether it will have any
> effect on the plasticizer in the PVC insulation.
>
> Better stick to air-tight containers and silica gel packs.
>
> Neil
> --
> http://www.njohnson.co.uk
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