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Re: [TCML] secondary coil form



PVC "can be" recycled but it's never done in my neck of the woods. Landfill space is so cheap in the southeast, very little gets recycled, unless it's cheaper than landfill tipping fees.



________________________________
 From: Jim Lux <jimlux@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: tesla@xxxxxxxxxx 
Sent: Wednesday, February 15, 2012 10:46 AM
Subject: Re: [TCML] secondary coil form
 
On 2/15/12 3:29 AM, Yurtle Turtle wrote:
> C-900 pipe is pressure rated and NSF approved for drinking water use.
> No foam to worry about as it's pressure rated, but the microwave test
> will tell you if any of the materials used to make it blue are
> conductive. It's blue to meet the color standard for different types
> of utilities.


Not so much what makes it blue, as the crud that's in the raw materials. 
  I was always amazed when turning *white* PVC pipe down on a lathe how 
the inside isn't always very white.

>
> As to the issue of dumpster diving, I work for a local government and
> we are forbidden to dumpster dive, but contractors are not. We can't
> use public funds to buy stuff, then decide we don't need it anymore
> and take it home. We can dispose of things in two ways, by auctioning
> it off, or by making a contractor dispose of it as a part of a
> construction project. The thought process being that if it has any
> value, the contractor will reflect that in their bids.

Exactly the same at JPL.. And even if it's "valuable trash", the people 
who have the "pick up the recycling" contract factor in the value of the 
stuff.


  I can't tell
> you how many times I've watched PLCs, VFDs, control panels,
> transformers, etc. go to the scrap yard, when I could have either
> asked for it for free, or at least paid the scrap value to the
> contractor. Since I administer the contracts, I don't even want the
> appearance of conflict of interest, so I tearfully watch them go
> away.

Yes, there was a whole scandal some decades ago

  A contractor is free to run their business as they see fit.
> Some will recycle all metals, while others might use the money for
> aluminum or copper to pay for a BBQ lunch for their employees.
> Personally, I'd much rather see things that aren't recyclable such as
> PVC pipe, go to a good use, rather than the landfill.


PVC gets recycled.. it's ground up and turned into new PVC pipe (or toys 
and such)..

>
>
>
> ________________________________ From: Jim Lux<jimlux@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> To: tesla@xxxxxxxxxx Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2012 9:01 PM
> Subject: Re: [TCML] secondary coil form
>
> On 2/14/12 4:21 PM, Nick Andrews wrote:
>>
>> I dunno, but I have a 10' piece of 12" C900 PVC blue water pipe in
>> my back yard I was thinking of winding a coil on.  Wall thickness
>> is maybe 1/2" though, so it's not light at all!  I 'found' it on
>> the side of a road where it had been sitting for a year after a
>> line was put in, so it was fair game.  Took about 5 minutes to cut
>> with the cordless sawzall though.  I have access to plenty of 6"
>> C900 (green water line-rated pipe) or 8" SDR35 (thinner wall
>> non-pressure) PVC on a sewer line project I am working on for NASA,
>> as we are putting in about 83,000 feet of sewer.  Since I am the
>> Project Manager, I could claim ownership of any cut pieces to
>> use...  Anyone try green or blue pipe and have issues with
>> arc-tracking?
>>
>
> Stick a piece in the microwave and see if it gets warm.  It's a
> decent test of conductivity.
>
> A lot of low pressure pipe is actually a foam core with solid skins.
> Most ABS DWV (Drain, Waste, Vent aka sewer) is like this.  It's tough
> to tell, even if you saw it, because the foam looks the same, it's
> just significantly lower density.
>
> Over the years, several folks on the list have used various and
> sundry SDR type pipe, which is what I think you have, without
> problem.
>
> What you're really concerned about is whether the crud going into the
> recycling extruder happened to be a batch with metal filings and
> conductive "stuff".  there's no way to tell, so some sort of test is
> appropriate.
>
> I don't know what would be good.  Most coilers have a NST or
> equivalent laying around, so that gives you a nice 15-20kV (peak)
> test source.  If you wrap two wires around the form, say, an inch
> apart, and see if it breaks down internally?
>
>
> [interesting that you are a contractor for NASA.. at the NASA
> facility I work at, we're told that dumpster diving or scrap
> collecting is strictly verboten.  No taking empty boxes home, no
> taking anything.  Presumably there was some spectacular and egregious
> issue in the past: "Oh, this gold bar is scrap, so I'll just pitch it
> in the metal recycling bin"]
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>

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