Todays Project - What did you do today?
You have found a "shiney " setting on your camera DroolDrool
John
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I never finish a piece that beautifully, the stuff I do has tooling marks so people say things like "cool! didja make it yerself" Worthy
Busy Bee 12-36 lathe, Busy Bee Mill drill, Busy Bee 4x6 bandsaw, Homemade 9x17 bandsaw, Ad infinitum.
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    [attachment=8848] New job gone bad "Hate when this happens" A family brought this to the shop to be restored , (some times I do these kinds of things if it's slow in the shop ) . Anyway they said it had been in the family over 150 years . It was built in 1831 in Chicago, Ill , has been to South America , Mexico , and now back here .
I started to take it apart and found the whole back of it was packed with "Asbestos" Yikes
Needless to say I stopped work, closed it up and bagged it as fast as I could , then called the people to come and get it . What a shame , I will finish it when they get it cleaned out , but that stuff is too dangerous to mess with . Thats how it goes sometimes .....
kenne, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Jun 2014.
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Ed - is that so you can pop the top off beer bottles without having to search around for an opener?

Looks nice.
Hunting American dentists since 2015.
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(07-10-2014, 06:47 PM)Mayhem Wrote: Ed - is that so you can pop the top off beer bottles without having to search around for an opener?

...

Oops! Busted. Blush

Ed
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Looks great Ed, defiantly a job well done!! Smiley-signs107

Jerry Smiley-eatdrink004
ETC57, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Feb 2012.
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(07-10-2014, 06:38 PM)kenne Wrote: New job gone bad "Hate when this happens" A family brought this to the shop to be restored , (some times I do these kinds of things if it's slow in the shop ) . Anyway they said it had been in the family over 150 years . It was built in 1831 in Chicago, Ill , has been to South America , Mexico , and now back here .
I started to take it apart and found the whole back of it was packed with "Asbestos" Yikes
Needless to say I stopped work, closed it up and bagged it as fast as I could , then called the people to come and get it . What a shame , I will finish it when they get it cleaned out , but that stuff is too dangerous to mess with . Thats how it goes sometimes .....

Asbestos used to be everywhere. When I was younger, I used asbestos to build a foundry furnace. It was readily available at the local hardware store and it could be mixed with water and formed into any shape desired, which brings up a good point. Asbestos is only hazardous in dust form. To make it safe, all you need to do is wet it down. Silicon is the same way, which is why it is now used wet for sand blasting.

How did we ever survive?

Tom
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Tom, probably reasonably true with white asbestos - not quite so ok with blue asbestos.

Many is the corrugated asbestos roof I've sawn up and fire place I've blocked with asbestos cement board. When I had Launderettes years back, we had to do an asbestos survey, and the only bits they could find were in the wired fuse holders for the power distribution. Tiny bits perhaps 1/4" x 1/2". We had to have a log with a 'plan', inspect every year and report on it's condition! Needless to say I just changed the fuse holders :)
Andrew Mawson, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Oct 2013.
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(07-11-2014, 06:59 AM)TomG Wrote:
(07-10-2014, 06:38 PM)kenne Wrote: New job gone bad "Hate when this happens" A family brought this to the shop to be restored , (some times I do these kinds of things if it's slow in the shop ) . Anyway they said it had been in the family over 150 years . It was built in 1831 in Chicago, Ill , has been to South America , Mexico , and now back here .
I started to take it apart and found the whole back of it was packed with "Asbestos" Yikes
Needless to say I stopped work, closed it up and bagged it as fast as I could , then called the people to come and get it . What a shame , I will finish it when they get it cleaned out , but that stuff is too dangerous to mess with . Thats how it goes sometimes .....

Asbestos used to be everywhere. When I was younger, I used asbestos to build a foundry furnace. It was readily available at the local hardware store and it could be mixed with water and formed into any shape desired, which brings up a good point. Asbestos is only hazardous in dust form. To make it safe, all you need to do is wet it down. Silicon is the same way, which is why it is now used wet for sand blasting.

How did we ever survive?

Tom

I have over the years worked with asbestos in brake linings , clutches, and other such things , and a few times in construction , but after seeing my Father-in-law die from Methopheloma (not sure of the spelling) cancer , I no longer take chances with this stuff . He only lasted (8) months from diagnosis to death ,Scary !
Frankly, I am amazed any of us are still alive , but you know how that goes , what doesn't kill you ,makes you stronger Drinks
kenne, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Jun 2014.
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(07-10-2014, 03:16 PM)EdK Wrote: Finished this piece of the new bracket for the lathe cross slide scale.

Ed
Beautiful piece of work , whats next ?
kenne, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Jun 2014.
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