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woods[_2_] January 31st 11 05:02 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it would
be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum on top of
them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor cement compound.

Frank[_13_] January 31st 11 05:21 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
On 1/31/2011 12:02 PM, woods wrote:
I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it would
be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum on top of
them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor cement compound.


I can't give construction specifics but as far as asbestos exposure, it
is OK. I'd be more concerned about filling voids with cement that may
sag. The asbestos is not going any where.

WW[_2_] January 31st 11 05:24 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 

"woods" wrote in message
...
I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it would
be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum on top of
them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor cement compound.


Why not glue the loose tiles down before covering them? No need for extra
work with filler.



RicodJour January 31st 11 06:09 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
On Jan 31, 12:21*pm, Frank wrote:
On 1/31/2011 12:02 PM, woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it would
be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum on top of
them? *Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor cement compound.


I can't give construction specifics but as far as asbestos exposure, it
is OK. *I'd be more concerned about filling voids with cement that may
sag. *The asbestos is not going any where.


It's OK for the OP to be exposed to asbestos? How do you feel about
him wearing seat belts? Is that unnecessary as well? Sheesh.

OP: Asbestos is only a problem when the fibers get airborne, which
they do quite readily. It's your home and your health, and
technically you're supposed to call to have the guys in the moon suits
in to do it, but that's overkill for floor tile in my opinion.

I can't tell you what you should do, but I would definitely suit up,
wear a N95 dust mask or respirator, and wet everything down prior to
starting. If I saw any dust at all I'd know I haven't wet things down
enough, and I'd have plenty of lighting so I'd be sure to notice the
dust. I'd use plastic and tape off the area, tape doors closed, and
have one window in the basement open with a fan blowing out. That
would create negative air pressure in the work space, and any minor
amount of dust that did manage to get airborne wouldn't escape into
the rest of the house.

I'd put everything in a doubled up contractor trash bags inside a
trash can with some newspaper on the bottom to prevent the corners of
the tile from cutting through the bags, and I wouldn't let the trash
can get too heavy. I'd spray down the stuff inside the bag just
before tying it up - can you tell I think wetting the stuff down is
the critical step, yet? I'd move slowly when tying up the bags as
squeezing them quickly tends to puff out some air, and that could
carry dust. And I'd pass the bags out through another basement window
so I wouldn't be traipsing through the house with the stuff. I'd work
in smaller sections where I could keep the tile and everything else
wet without drenching the basement, and I'd pick up the wet slurry
with a wet dry vacuum with a HEPA filter that I'd be prepared to toss
when I'm done (the filter, not the vacuum!). I wouldn't be sucking up
standing puddles, but more like wet slurry to prevent clogging the
vaccum filter.

At the end of everything it should be wiped down with wet rags and
they would be tossed in the trash when done. I wouldn't want to be
going back and forth from a bucket of water, wringing out the rags
like I'd normally do when wiping things down, as that would inevitably
leave some asbestos fibers behind.

I think you get the idea of how I'd go about it - I'd be fastidious
about it. You're only going to do it once, and no matter how you look
at it it's going to take a full day to do it safely, and it's no big
deal.

R

Steve B[_11_] January 31st 11 06:16 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it would
be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum on top of
them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor cement compound.


If a few of the tiles have come loose, then the rest are about ready to
let go. I just finished a job like this. The tiles that weren't yet
loose came up mostly whole using only a steel prybar.

Check a few more tiles. You might have only a 15-minute job getting rid
of the whole mess.

--
Steve B
New Life Home Improvement
Arlington, TX USA

[email protected] January 31st 11 06:31 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 10:09:43 -0800 (PST), RicodJour
wrote:

On Jan 31, 12:21Â*pm, Frank wrote:
On 1/31/2011 12:02 PM, woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it would
be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum on top of
them? Â*Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor cement compound.


I can't give construction specifics but as far as asbestos exposure, it
is OK. Â*I'd be more concerned about filling voids with cement that may
sag. Â*The asbestos is not going any where.


It's OK for the OP to be exposed to asbestos? How do you feel about
him wearing seat belts? Is that unnecessary as well? Sheesh.


If he does not break opr remove the tiles he will NOT be "exposed" to
asbestos. He is best to just reglue the loose ones and cover it up
with a solid vinyl floor covering.

OP: Asbestos is only a problem when the fibers get airborne, which
they do quite readily. It's your home and your health, and
technically you're supposed to call to have the guys in the moon suits
in to do it, but that's overkill for floor tile in my opinion.


It is a vinyl asbestos tile, with the asbestos encapsulated very well.
As long as it is not broken up/removed there will be NO fibres loose -
and even if removing the tile, unless you need to break them up badly,
very little exposure.

The following recomendations are likely gross overkill, but would
definitely be a safe way to go about removing the tile

I can't tell you what you should do, but I would definitely suit up,
wear a N95 dust mask or respirator, and wet everything down prior to
starting. If I saw any dust at all I'd know I haven't wet things down
enough, and I'd have plenty of lighting so I'd be sure to notice the
dust. I'd use plastic and tape off the area, tape doors closed, and
have one window in the basement open with a fan blowing out. That
would create negative air pressure in the work space, and any minor
amount of dust that did manage to get airborne wouldn't escape into
the rest of the house.

I'd put everything in a doubled up contractor trash bags inside a
trash can with some newspaper on the bottom to prevent the corners of
the tile from cutting through the bags, and I wouldn't let the trash
can get too heavy. I'd spray down the stuff inside the bag just
before tying it up - can you tell I think wetting the stuff down is
the critical step, yet? I'd move slowly when tying up the bags as
squeezing them quickly tends to puff out some air, and that could
carry dust. And I'd pass the bags out through another basement window
so I wouldn't be traipsing through the house with the stuff. I'd work
in smaller sections where I could keep the tile and everything else
wet without drenching the basement, and I'd pick up the wet slurry
with a wet dry vacuum with a HEPA filter that I'd be prepared to toss
when I'm done (the filter, not the vacuum!). I wouldn't be sucking up
standing puddles, but more like wet slurry to prevent clogging the
vaccum filter.

At the end of everything it should be wiped down with wet rags and
they would be tossed in the trash when done. I wouldn't want to be
going back and forth from a bucket of water, wringing out the rags
like I'd normally do when wiping things down, as that would inevitably
leave some asbestos fibers behind.

I think you get the idea of how I'd go about it - I'd be fastidious
about it. You're only going to do it once, and no matter how you look
at it it's going to take a full day to do it safely, and it's no big
deal.

R



Frank[_13_] January 31st 11 06:46 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
On 1/31/2011 1:31 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 10:09:43 -0800 (PST), RicodJour
wrote:

On Jan 31, 12:21 pm, wrote:
On 1/31/2011 12:02 PM, woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it would
be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum on top of
them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor cement compound.

I can't give construction specifics but as far as asbestos exposure, it
is OK. I'd be more concerned about filling voids with cement that may
sag. The asbestos is not going any where.


It's OK for the OP to be exposed to asbestos? How do you feel about
him wearing seat belts? Is that unnecessary as well? Sheesh.


If he does not break opr remove the tiles he will NOT be "exposed" to
asbestos. He is best to just reglue the loose ones and cover it up
with a solid vinyl floor covering.

OP: Asbestos is only a problem when the fibers get airborne, which
they do quite readily. It's your home and your health, and
technically you're supposed to call to have the guys in the moon suits
in to do it, but that's overkill for floor tile in my opinion.


It is a vinyl asbestos tile, with the asbestos encapsulated very well.
As long as it is not broken up/removed there will be NO fibres loose -
and even if removing the tile, unless you need to break them up badly,
very little exposure.

The following recomendations are likely gross overkill, but would
definitely be a safe way to go about removing the tile

I can't tell you what you should do, but I would definitely suit up,
wear a N95 dust mask or respirator, and wet everything down prior to
starting. If I saw any dust at all I'd know I haven't wet things down
enough, and I'd have plenty of lighting so I'd be sure to notice the
dust. I'd use plastic and tape off the area, tape doors closed, and
have one window in the basement open with a fan blowing out. That
would create negative air pressure in the work space, and any minor
amount of dust that did manage to get airborne wouldn't escape into
the rest of the house.

I'd put everything in a doubled up contractor trash bags inside a
trash can with some newspaper on the bottom to prevent the corners of
the tile from cutting through the bags, and I wouldn't let the trash
can get too heavy. I'd spray down the stuff inside the bag just
before tying it up - can you tell I think wetting the stuff down is
the critical step, yet? I'd move slowly when tying up the bags as
squeezing them quickly tends to puff out some air, and that could
carry dust. And I'd pass the bags out through another basement window
so I wouldn't be traipsing through the house with the stuff. I'd work
in smaller sections where I could keep the tile and everything else
wet without drenching the basement, and I'd pick up the wet slurry
with a wet dry vacuum with a HEPA filter that I'd be prepared to toss
when I'm done (the filter, not the vacuum!). I wouldn't be sucking up
standing puddles, but more like wet slurry to prevent clogging the
vaccum filter.

At the end of everything it should be wiped down with wet rags and
they would be tossed in the trash when done. I wouldn't want to be
going back and forth from a bucket of water, wringing out the rags
like I'd normally do when wiping things down, as that would inevitably
leave some asbestos fibers behind.

I think you get the idea of how I'd go about it - I'd be fastidious
about it. You're only going to do it once, and no matter how you look
at it it's going to take a full day to do it safely, and it's no big
deal.

R


That's right. Asbestos is encapsulated. If dust is generated, you
should wear a dust mask no matter what the dust is.

The general public thinks the asbestos is going to jump out at you ;)

Red Green January 31st 11 08:24 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
Frank wrote in
:

On 1/31/2011 1:31 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 10:09:43 -0800 (PST), RicodJour
wrote:

On Jan 31, 12:21 pm, wrote:
On 1/31/2011 12:02 PM, woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it
would be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum
on top of them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor
cement compound.

I can't give construction specifics but as far as asbestos
exposure, it is OK. I'd be more concerned about filling voids with
cement that may sag. The asbestos is not going any where.

It's OK for the OP to be exposed to asbestos? How do you feel about
him wearing seat belts? Is that unnecessary as well? Sheesh.


If he does not break opr remove the tiles he will NOT be "exposed" to
asbestos. He is best to just reglue the loose ones and cover it up
with a solid vinyl floor covering.

OP: Asbestos is only a problem when the fibers get airborne, which
they do quite readily. It's your home and your health, and
technically you're supposed to call to have the guys in the moon
suits in to do it, but that's overkill for floor tile in my opinion.


It is a vinyl asbestos tile, with the asbestos encapsulated very
well. As long as it is not broken up/removed there will be NO fibres
loose - and even if removing the tile, unless you need to break them
up badly, very little exposure.

The following recomendations are likely gross overkill, but would
definitely be a safe way to go about removing the tile

I can't tell you what you should do, but I would definitely suit up,
wear a N95 dust mask or respirator, and wet everything down prior to
starting. If I saw any dust at all I'd know I haven't wet things
down enough, and I'd have plenty of lighting so I'd be sure to
notice the dust. I'd use plastic and tape off the area, tape doors
closed, and have one window in the basement open with a fan blowing
out. That would create negative air pressure in the work space, and
any minor amount of dust that did manage to get airborne wouldn't
escape into the rest of the house.

I'd put everything in a doubled up contractor trash bags inside a
trash can with some newspaper on the bottom to prevent the corners
of the tile from cutting through the bags, and I wouldn't let the
trash can get too heavy. I'd spray down the stuff inside the bag
just before tying it up - can you tell I think wetting the stuff
down is the critical step, yet? I'd move slowly when tying up the
bags as squeezing them quickly tends to puff out some air, and that
could carry dust. And I'd pass the bags out through another
basement window so I wouldn't be traipsing through the house with
the stuff. I'd work in smaller sections where I could keep the tile
and everything else wet without drenching the basement, and I'd pick
up the wet slurry with a wet dry vacuum with a HEPA filter that I'd
be prepared to toss when I'm done (the filter, not the vacuum!). I
wouldn't be sucking up standing puddles, but more like wet slurry to
prevent clogging the vaccum filter.

At the end of everything it should be wiped down with wet rags and
they would be tossed in the trash when done. I wouldn't want to be
going back and forth from a bucket of water, wringing out the rags
like I'd normally do when wiping things down, as that would
inevitably leave some asbestos fibers behind.

I think you get the idea of how I'd go about it - I'd be fastidious
about it. You're only going to do it once, and no matter how you
look at it it's going to take a full day to do it safely, and it's
no big deal.

R


That's right. Asbestos is encapsulated. If dust is generated, you
should wear a dust mask no matter what the dust is.


Yea, like we all did changing all those brake shoes when we were younger
:-)


The general public thinks the asbestos is going to jump out at you ;)



[email protected] January 31st 11 09:08 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 20:24:32 GMT, Red Green
wrote:

Frank wrote in
:

On 1/31/2011 1:31 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 10:09:43 -0800 (PST), RicodJour
wrote:

On Jan 31, 12:21 pm, wrote:
On 1/31/2011 12:02 PM, woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it
would be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum
on top of them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor
cement compound.

I can't give construction specifics but as far as asbestos
exposure, it is OK. I'd be more concerned about filling voids with
cement that may sag. The asbestos is not going any where.

It's OK for the OP to be exposed to asbestos? How do you feel about
him wearing seat belts? Is that unnecessary as well? Sheesh.

If he does not break opr remove the tiles he will NOT be "exposed" to
asbestos. He is best to just reglue the loose ones and cover it up
with a solid vinyl floor covering.

OP: Asbestos is only a problem when the fibers get airborne, which
they do quite readily. It's your home and your health, and
technically you're supposed to call to have the guys in the moon
suits in to do it, but that's overkill for floor tile in my opinion.

It is a vinyl asbestos tile, with the asbestos encapsulated very
well. As long as it is not broken up/removed there will be NO fibres
loose - and even if removing the tile, unless you need to break them
up badly, very little exposure.

The following recomendations are likely gross overkill, but would
definitely be a safe way to go about removing the tile

I can't tell you what you should do, but I would definitely suit up,
wear a N95 dust mask or respirator, and wet everything down prior to
starting. If I saw any dust at all I'd know I haven't wet things
down enough, and I'd have plenty of lighting so I'd be sure to
notice the dust. I'd use plastic and tape off the area, tape doors
closed, and have one window in the basement open with a fan blowing
out. That would create negative air pressure in the work space, and
any minor amount of dust that did manage to get airborne wouldn't
escape into the rest of the house.

I'd put everything in a doubled up contractor trash bags inside a
trash can with some newspaper on the bottom to prevent the corners
of the tile from cutting through the bags, and I wouldn't let the
trash can get too heavy. I'd spray down the stuff inside the bag
just before tying it up - can you tell I think wetting the stuff
down is the critical step, yet? I'd move slowly when tying up the
bags as squeezing them quickly tends to puff out some air, and that
could carry dust. And I'd pass the bags out through another
basement window so I wouldn't be traipsing through the house with
the stuff. I'd work in smaller sections where I could keep the tile
and everything else wet without drenching the basement, and I'd pick
up the wet slurry with a wet dry vacuum with a HEPA filter that I'd
be prepared to toss when I'm done (the filter, not the vacuum!). I
wouldn't be sucking up standing puddles, but more like wet slurry to
prevent clogging the vaccum filter.

At the end of everything it should be wiped down with wet rags and
they would be tossed in the trash when done. I wouldn't want to be
going back and forth from a bucket of water, wringing out the rags
like I'd normally do when wiping things down, as that would
inevitably leave some asbestos fibers behind.

I think you get the idea of how I'd go about it - I'd be fastidious
about it. You're only going to do it once, and no matter how you
look at it it's going to take a full day to do it safely, and it's
no big deal.

R

That's right. Asbestos is encapsulated. If dust is generated, you
should wear a dust mask no matter what the dust is.


Yea, like we all did changing all those brake shoes when we were younger
:-)


I usually washed the dust down the drain, at least after the first 2
years (was a mechanic since 1969)

The general public thinks the asbestos is going to jump out at you ;)



[email protected] January 31st 11 11:06 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 12:16:30 -0600, "Steve B"
wrote:

woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it would
be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum on top of
them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor cement compound.


If a few of the tiles have come loose, then the rest are about ready to
let go. I just finished a job like this. The tiles that weren't yet
loose came up mostly whole using only a steel prybar.

Check a few more tiles. You might have only a 15-minute job getting rid
of the whole mess.


The above is exactly how one gets exposed to asbestos. Do not disturb
them. Just cover them. That's the safe best way to handle them.

Frank[_13_] January 31st 11 11:23 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
On 1/31/2011 3:24 PM, Red Green wrote:
wrote in
:

On 1/31/2011 1:31 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 10:09:43 -0800 (PST), RicodJour
wrote:

On Jan 31, 12:21 pm, wrote:
On 1/31/2011 12:02 PM, woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it
would be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum
on top of them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor
cement compound.

I can't give construction specifics but as far as asbestos
exposure, it is OK. I'd be more concerned about filling voids with
cement that may sag. The asbestos is not going any where.

It's OK for the OP to be exposed to asbestos? How do you feel about
him wearing seat belts? Is that unnecessary as well? Sheesh.

If he does not break opr remove the tiles he will NOT be "exposed" to
asbestos. He is best to just reglue the loose ones and cover it up
with a solid vinyl floor covering.

OP: Asbestos is only a problem when the fibers get airborne, which
they do quite readily. It's your home and your health, and
technically you're supposed to call to have the guys in the moon
suits in to do it, but that's overkill for floor tile in my opinion.

It is a vinyl asbestos tile, with the asbestos encapsulated very
well. As long as it is not broken up/removed there will be NO fibres
loose - and even if removing the tile, unless you need to break them
up badly, very little exposure.

The following recomendations are likely gross overkill, but would
definitely be a safe way to go about removing the tile

I can't tell you what you should do, but I would definitely suit up,
wear a N95 dust mask or respirator, and wet everything down prior to
starting. If I saw any dust at all I'd know I haven't wet things
down enough, and I'd have plenty of lighting so I'd be sure to
notice the dust. I'd use plastic and tape off the area, tape doors
closed, and have one window in the basement open with a fan blowing
out. That would create negative air pressure in the work space, and
any minor amount of dust that did manage to get airborne wouldn't
escape into the rest of the house.

I'd put everything in a doubled up contractor trash bags inside a
trash can with some newspaper on the bottom to prevent the corners
of the tile from cutting through the bags, and I wouldn't let the
trash can get too heavy. I'd spray down the stuff inside the bag
just before tying it up - can you tell I think wetting the stuff
down is the critical step, yet? I'd move slowly when tying up the
bags as squeezing them quickly tends to puff out some air, and that
could carry dust. And I'd pass the bags out through another
basement window so I wouldn't be traipsing through the house with
the stuff. I'd work in smaller sections where I could keep the tile
and everything else wet without drenching the basement, and I'd pick
up the wet slurry with a wet dry vacuum with a HEPA filter that I'd
be prepared to toss when I'm done (the filter, not the vacuum!). I
wouldn't be sucking up standing puddles, but more like wet slurry to
prevent clogging the vaccum filter.

At the end of everything it should be wiped down with wet rags and
they would be tossed in the trash when done. I wouldn't want to be
going back and forth from a bucket of water, wringing out the rags
like I'd normally do when wiping things down, as that would
inevitably leave some asbestos fibers behind.

I think you get the idea of how I'd go about it - I'd be fastidious
about it. You're only going to do it once, and no matter how you
look at it it's going to take a full day to do it safely, and it's
no big deal.

R

That's right. Asbestos is encapsulated. If dust is generated, you
should wear a dust mask no matter what the dust is.


Yea, like we all did changing all those brake shoes when we were younger
:-)


The general public thinks the asbestos is going to jump out at you ;)



In my experience most problems with chemical exposure are with the
general public or small shops or businesses not covered by OSHA.
But, I did know of a guy that worked in a big company that knew all the
hazards of asbestos and thought he could get away from a dust mask by
doing his asbestos cutting outside and developed a touch of asbestosis.
A simple dust mask would have prevented his problem.

Stormin Mormon January 31st 11 11:46 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
And take it all to a superfund site, to have it destroyed?

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
..


"RicodJour" wrote in message
...


It's OK for the OP to be exposed to asbestos? How do you
feel about
him wearing seat belts? Is that unnecessary as well?
Sheesh.

OP: Asbestos is only a problem when the fibers get
airborne, which
they do quite readily. It's your home and your health, and
technically you're supposed to call to have the guys in the
moon suits
in to do it, but that's overkill for floor tile in my
opinion.

I can't tell you what you should do, but I would definitely
suit up,
wear a N95 dust mask or respirator, and wet everything down
prior to
starting. If I saw any dust at all I'd know I haven't wet
things down
enough, and I'd have plenty of lighting so I'd be sure to
notice the
dust. I'd use plastic and tape off the area, tape doors
closed, and
have one window in the basement open with a fan blowing out.
That
would create negative air pressure in the work space, and
any minor
amount of dust that did manage to get airborne wouldn't
escape into
the rest of the house.

I'd put everything in a doubled up contractor trash bags
inside a
trash can with some newspaper on the bottom to prevent the
corners of
the tile from cutting through the bags, and I wouldn't let
the trash
can get too heavy. I'd spray down the stuff inside the bag
just
before tying it up - can you tell I think wetting the stuff
down is
the critical step, yet? I'd move slowly when tying up the
bags as
squeezing them quickly tends to puff out some air, and that
could
carry dust. And I'd pass the bags out through another
basement window
so I wouldn't be traipsing through the house with the stuff.
I'd work
in smaller sections where I could keep the tile and
everything else
wet without drenching the basement, and I'd pick up the wet
slurry
with a wet dry vacuum with a HEPA filter that I'd be
prepared to toss
when I'm done (the filter, not the vacuum!). I wouldn't be
sucking up
standing puddles, but more like wet slurry to prevent
clogging the
vaccum filter.

At the end of everything it should be wiped down with wet
rags and
they would be tossed in the trash when done. I wouldn't
want to be
going back and forth from a bucket of water, wringing out
the rags
like I'd normally do when wiping things down, as that would
inevitably
leave some asbestos fibers behind.

I think you get the idea of how I'd go about it - I'd be
fastidious
about it. You're only going to do it once, and no matter
how you look
at it it's going to take a full day to do it safely, and
it's no big
deal.

R



Stormin Mormon February 1st 11 12:29 AM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
Or, by working only on windy days.

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
..


"Frank"
wrote in message
...

In my experience most problems with chemical exposure are
with the
general public or small shops or businesses not covered by
OSHA.
But, I did know of a guy that worked in a big company that
knew all the
hazards of asbestos and thought he could get away from a
dust mask by
doing his asbestos cutting outside and developed a touch of
asbestosis.
A simple dust mask would have prevented his problem.



Stormin Mormon February 1st 11 12:31 AM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
Some future home buyer is likely to demand asbestos search.
The ceiling tiles will be found, and then terribly expensive
to get them abated, remediated, flagellated, and so on. EPA
authorized guys in moon suits and expensive certified trash
bags. Better to be rid of this, and soon.

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
..


wrote in message
...

The above is exactly how one gets exposed to asbestos. Do
not disturb
them. Just cover them. That's the safe best way to handle
them.



Stormin Mormon February 1st 11 12:33 AM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
Guys who change brake shoes, and breathe
asbestos; it affects their viseirojwen.

--
Coruewrn A. Yrueporj
Lrner esior enre snerlkenr
www.lds.org
..


"Red Green" wrote in message
...

That's right. Asbestos is encapsulated. If dust is
generated, you
should wear a dust mask no matter what the dust is.


Yea, like we all did changing all those brake shoes when we
were younger
:-)




[email protected] February 1st 11 01:19 AM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 19:31:37 -0500, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote:

Some future home buyer is likely to demand asbestos search.
The ceiling tiles will be found, and then terribly expensive
to get them abated, remediated, flagellated, and so on. EPA
authorized guys in moon suits and expensive certified trash
bags. Better to be rid of this, and soon.


You're an expert on this? .....So according to your logic a house
with asbestos shingles or tiles can't be sold?

Leaving asbestos in place is commonly done by experts in the field.


LSMFT February 1st 11 03:02 AM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
Red Green wrote:
wrote in
:

On 1/31/2011 1:31 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 10:09:43 -0800 (PST), RicodJour
wrote:

On Jan 31, 12:21 pm, wrote:
On 1/31/2011 12:02 PM, woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it
would be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum
on top of them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor
cement compound.

I can't give construction specifics but as far as asbestos
exposure, it is OK. I'd be more concerned about filling voids with
cement that may sag. The asbestos is not going any where.

It's OK for the OP to be exposed to asbestos? How do you feel about
him wearing seat belts? Is that unnecessary as well? Sheesh.

If he does not break opr remove the tiles he will NOT be "exposed" to
asbestos. He is best to just reglue the loose ones and cover it up
with a solid vinyl floor covering.

OP: Asbestos is only a problem when the fibers get airborne, which
they do quite readily. It's your home and your health, and
technically you're supposed to call to have the guys in the moon
suits in to do it, but that's overkill for floor tile in my opinion.

It is a vinyl asbestos tile, with the asbestos encapsulated very
well. As long as it is not broken up/removed there will be NO fibres
loose - and even if removing the tile, unless you need to break them
up badly, very little exposure.

The following recomendations are likely gross overkill, but would
definitely be a safe way to go about removing the tile

I can't tell you what you should do, but I would definitely suit up,
wear a N95 dust mask or respirator, and wet everything down prior to
starting. If I saw any dust at all I'd know I haven't wet things
down enough, and I'd have plenty of lighting so I'd be sure to
notice the dust. I'd use plastic and tape off the area, tape doors
closed, and have one window in the basement open with a fan blowing
out. That would create negative air pressure in the work space, and
any minor amount of dust that did manage to get airborne wouldn't
escape into the rest of the house.

I'd put everything in a doubled up contractor trash bags inside a
trash can with some newspaper on the bottom to prevent the corners
of the tile from cutting through the bags, and I wouldn't let the
trash can get too heavy. I'd spray down the stuff inside the bag
just before tying it up - can you tell I think wetting the stuff
down is the critical step, yet? I'd move slowly when tying up the
bags as squeezing them quickly tends to puff out some air, and that
could carry dust. And I'd pass the bags out through another
basement window so I wouldn't be traipsing through the house with
the stuff. I'd work in smaller sections where I could keep the tile
and everything else wet without drenching the basement, and I'd pick
up the wet slurry with a wet dry vacuum with a HEPA filter that I'd
be prepared to toss when I'm done (the filter, not the vacuum!). I
wouldn't be sucking up standing puddles, but more like wet slurry to
prevent clogging the vaccum filter.

At the end of everything it should be wiped down with wet rags and
they would be tossed in the trash when done. I wouldn't want to be
going back and forth from a bucket of water, wringing out the rags
like I'd normally do when wiping things down, as that would
inevitably leave some asbestos fibers behind.

I think you get the idea of how I'd go about it - I'd be fastidious
about it. You're only going to do it once, and no matter how you
look at it it's going to take a full day to do it safely, and it's
no big deal.

R

That's right. Asbestos is encapsulated. If dust is generated, you
should wear a dust mask no matter what the dust is.


Yea, like we all did changing all those brake shoes when we were younger
:-)


The general public thinks the asbestos is going to jump out at you ;)


Yea, changing brake shoes and blowing out the drum and brake parts.


--
LSMFT

Those who would give up Essential Liberty
to purchase a little Temporary Safety,
deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.

Red Green February 1st 11 03:21 AM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
LSMFT wrote in :

Red Green wrote:
wrote in
:

On 1/31/2011 1:31 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 10:09:43 -0800 (PST), RicodJour
wrote:

On Jan 31, 12:21 pm,
wrote:
On 1/31/2011 12:02 PM, woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it
would be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue
linoleum on top of them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with
floor cement compound.

I can't give construction specifics but as far as asbestos
exposure, it is OK. I'd be more concerned about filling voids
with cement that may sag. The asbestos is not going any where.

It's OK for the OP to be exposed to asbestos? How do you feel
about him wearing seat belts? Is that unnecessary as well?
Sheesh.

If he does not break opr remove the tiles he will NOT be "exposed"
to asbestos. He is best to just reglue the loose ones and cover it
up with a solid vinyl floor covering.

OP: Asbestos is only a problem when the fibers get airborne,
which they do quite readily. It's your home and your health, and
technically you're supposed to call to have the guys in the moon
suits in to do it, but that's overkill for floor tile in my
opinion.

It is a vinyl asbestos tile, with the asbestos encapsulated very
well. As long as it is not broken up/removed there will be NO
fibres loose - and even if removing the tile, unless you need to
break them up badly, very little exposure.

The following recomendations are likely gross overkill, but would
definitely be a safe way to go about removing the tile

I can't tell you what you should do, but I would definitely suit
up, wear a N95 dust mask or respirator, and wet everything down
prior to starting. If I saw any dust at all I'd know I haven't
wet things down enough, and I'd have plenty of lighting so I'd be
sure to notice the dust. I'd use plastic and tape off the area,
tape doors closed, and have one window in the basement open with a
fan blowing out. That would create negative air pressure in the
work space, and any minor amount of dust that did manage to get
airborne wouldn't escape into the rest of the house.

I'd put everything in a doubled up contractor trash bags inside a
trash can with some newspaper on the bottom to prevent the corners
of the tile from cutting through the bags, and I wouldn't let the
trash can get too heavy. I'd spray down the stuff inside the bag
just before tying it up - can you tell I think wetting the stuff
down is the critical step, yet? I'd move slowly when tying up the
bags as squeezing them quickly tends to puff out some air, and
that could carry dust. And I'd pass the bags out through another
basement window so I wouldn't be traipsing through the house with
the stuff. I'd work in smaller sections where I could keep the
tile and everything else wet without drenching the basement, and
I'd pick up the wet slurry with a wet dry vacuum with a HEPA
filter that I'd be prepared to toss when I'm done (the filter, not
the vacuum!). I wouldn't be sucking up standing puddles, but more
like wet slurry to prevent clogging the vaccum filter.

At the end of everything it should be wiped down with wet rags and
they would be tossed in the trash when done. I wouldn't want to
be going back and forth from a bucket of water, wringing out the
rags like I'd normally do when wiping things down, as that would
inevitably leave some asbestos fibers behind.

I think you get the idea of how I'd go about it - I'd be
fastidious about it. You're only going to do it once, and no
matter how you look at it it's going to take a full day to do it
safely, and it's no big deal.

R

That's right. Asbestos is encapsulated. If dust is generated, you
should wear a dust mask no matter what the dust is.


Yea, like we all did changing all those brake shoes when we were
younger
:-)


The general public thinks the asbestos is going to jump out at you
;)


Yea, changing brake shoes and blowing out the drum and brake parts.



...with a cigarette hangin' out of the mouth.

RicodJour February 1st 11 03:23 AM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
On Jan 31, 6:46*pm, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote:

And take it all to a superfund site, to have it destroyed?


Maybe I should have put a smiley...? ;)

BTW, you top-posting maroon - you do know that it makes it impossible
to complete a joke when you top post. You're like the idjit that
spits out the punch line when other people haven't heard the joke yet.

Oh, sorry. Almost forgot. ;)

R

Ed Pawlowski[_2_] February 1st 11 10:53 AM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
?
wrote
You seem extremely phobic about this, and rightfully so. No one
should spend their lives living in fear. However I can help. Right
after reading this message, I formed an asbestos abatement company. I
will remove your tiles at the very reasonable cost of $50 per square
foot of tiled floor, plus the cost of materials and plane fare and/or
other transportation to and from the job.

Just think how much better you'll sleep at night knowing these tiles
are gone, and no longer poisoning your home.
Frank

President of: Franks Asbestos Abatement Service


Don't listen to Frank, he'd taking advantage of a crisis. I, on the other
hand, can help you get rid of that phobia and live in harmony with the
tiles. In only a few months time, I'll coach you to live life to the
fullest and have no fears. Don't fall for some abatement company scam when
for a low weekly payment of $59,99, you can have true peace in your life.


Red Green February 1st 11 01:13 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
"Ed Pawlowski" wrote in
:

?
wrote
You seem extremely phobic about this, and rightfully so. No one
should spend their lives living in fear. However I can help. Right
after reading this message, I formed an asbestos abatement company.
I will remove your tiles at the very reasonable cost of $50 per
square foot of tiled floor, plus the cost of materials and plane fare
and/or other transportation to and from the job.

Just think how much better you'll sleep at night knowing these tiles
are gone, and no longer poisoning your home.
Frank

President of: Franks Asbestos Abatement Service


Don't listen to Frank, he'd taking advantage of a crisis. I, on the
other hand, can help you get rid of that phobia and live in harmony
with the tiles. In only a few months time, I'll coach you to live
life to the fullest and have no fears. Don't fall for some abatement
company scam when for a low weekly payment of $59,99, you can have
true peace in your life.



You're hawking skills need crisping up Ed. It's "Low EASY payment..."

[email protected] February 1st 11 05:52 PM

Asbestos tile in basement
 
On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 23:13:44 -0600, wrote:

On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 18:06:58 -0500,
wrote:

On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 12:16:30 -0600, "Steve B"
wrote:

woods wrote:

I have the 9x9" asbestos tile in my basement, and I wonder if it would
be ok to just remove the loose tiles, and then glue linoleum on top of
them? Also smooth out the removed tiles with floor cement compound.

If a few of the tiles have come loose, then the rest are about ready to
let go. I just finished a job like this. The tiles that weren't yet
loose came up mostly whole using only a steel prybar.

Check a few more tiles. You might have only a 15-minute job getting rid
of the whole mess.


The above is exactly how one gets exposed to asbestos. Do not disturb
them. Just cover them. That's the safe best way to handle them.


But they MUST be removed or they will continue to kill whoever lives
in that house. In fact 100% of everyone exposed to asbestos will die,
sooner or later. So, you really should be experiencing a severe panic
because your life has been threatened just from living in a house with
asbestos.

You seem extremely phobic about this, and rightfully so. No one
should spend their lives living in fear. However I can help. Right
after reading this message, I formed an asbestos abatement company. I
will remove your tiles at the very reasonable cost of $50 per square
foot of tiled floor, plus the cost of materials and plane fare and/or
other transportation to and from the job.

Just think how much better you'll sleep at night knowing these tiles
are gone, and no longer poisoning your home. But dont delay, every
minute of your time spent in that house is one minute closer to your
death. You need to act immediately or all your worst fears about
asbestos will come true, and that will occur soon. ACT NOW.

I dont give out the phone number online, but you can reach my company
by email.

Franks Asbestos Abatement Service

Email open 24 hours a day.

Since you'll be my first customer, I'd like to offer you a $10
discount on the job. Simply copy and paste this message to your
email, and you'll get this discount. However, you MUST act within the
next 24 hours to receive this discount.

Frank

President of: Franks Asbestos Abatement Service

He got his email wrong though, its



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