Originally Posted by Itoldyouso
Off note a little how much lead gets into an avide fisherman when he is touching his dusty lead weights all day long?
Probably a good question. There are a lot of things that we never gave a 2nd thought about doing that are now considered hazardous. In the past, mechanics doing a brake job would sit there and use an air gun to blow brake dust all over the place (and themselves as well), we used lead in our paint, and bodywork, our furnace ducts were wrapped with asbestos, as was attic insulation.
I remember as a young kid I would run under the furnace ducts in our basement and take a stick and hit the pipes and watch this cloud of dust appear. I thought it was funny to do and entertaining.( I never said I was the BRIGHTEST kid on the block :LOL: :LOL: :LOL: ) Now, crews who remove this stuff look like some science fiction crew with all the haz-mat gear they wear. We dumped our old engine oil and gasoline down the drain or into the ground.
Bosses were good for sending workers into situations that today would get them jail time. We just didn't know about the dangers involved with some of these products back then, but now that we do it makes no sense to use them. I'm glad you have reconsidered using lead. Plastic fillers are so much easier to use and safer (still wear a good quality mask and goggles when grinding them) and they hold up even better than the old lead method.
Don