Refrigerator -- terrible smell!
On Sat, 7 Sep 2013 18:28:21 -0700 (PDT), Higgs Boson
wrote:
On Saturday, September 7, 2013 5:05:16 PM UTC-7, wrote:
On Fri, 06 Sep 2013 11:16:39 -0700, Oren wrote:
On Fri, 06 Sep 2013 13:03:22 -0500, The Daring Dufas
wrote:
On 9/6/2013 12:09 PM, Oren wrote:
On Thu, 05 Sep 2013 21:22:46 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
Did you pull out the drain pan? They are easily forgotten and can get
nasty
Exactly. Especially in units in the 50's - 60's. Areas with high
humidity. After cleaning the pan, Mom would add about 1/3 cup of
bleach in the pan that seemed to reduce any lingering smell.
Another nasty smell came from fish, Black Mullet. Due to the mercury
content the fish would not freeze completely and eventually was able
to rot in the freezer. Folks would salt cure the fish in an wooden
barrel before they had refrigerators.
If someone ate a lot of the poisonous mercury containing Black Mullet,
wouldn't that person pop their top if they got too hot or angry? O_o
TDD
chuckle
I presume folks didn't know about the mercury or dangers back then. As
a kid we played with mercury from T-stats, it never harmed me (twitch,
twitch, twitch).
Metallic mercury isn't all that dangerous. It's the organic mercury
compounds that are toxic as all hell. The problem with kids today is
that the 1) need warning labels on everything and 2) are too stupid to
read warning labels. Thank you Teachers' Unions.
The ones you SHOULD be thanking are the lawyers hired by manufacturers to spell out every fracking potential danger posed by a product just in case some [uncomplimentary noun] gets injured. Look at those caveats some time. Unbelievable! They are covering their a$$ets from here to eternity.
All the lawyers in the world would be powerless if the lefty sheep
weren't so damned dumb. No, it starts with the schools and that means
teachers (and by extension, the unions).
"The essential questions a Who teaches the children and what
do we teach them." --Plato
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