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#241
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 28/02/2021 18:13, Chris Hogg wrote:
On Sun, 28 Feb 2021 17:42:42 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 28/02/2021 17:18, bert wrote: In article , T i m writes On Sun, 28 Feb 2021 14:19:37 +0000, bert wrote: snip for the lazy troll and nymshifter Just as a matter of interest and digressing a little does anyone know how they propose to dispose of all these solar panels from warms and roof tops at end of life in about 25 years? Yes, by recycling, easy given they are mostly glass and metal. And which metals would they be? And why 25 years? Approximate life cycle. Just because they might not be giving 100% of their initial capacity there would be no reason to dispose of them if they were still outputting something? https://www.greenmatch.co.uk/blog/20...s-of-solar-pan el-recycling I also wonder how many CFL bulbs are now ending up in land fill. Oh dear, the poor burke / Spuke troll doesn't even know what CFL stands for ... ![]() 'Compact fluorescent lamp / bulb' ... of did you mean CFBs but I guess more than there might be in landfill if 'people' like you don't dispose of them properly (our local recycling centre has a place for them and plain tubes). Wiki CFL A compact fluorescent lamp (CFL), also called compact fluorescent light Not as smart as you think. And why focus on CFL's and not smoke detectors and not anything powered by nicad or NiMh cells? 10 year life expectancy Much less of a problem, but a problem just the same. How many people will simply chuck them in the waste bun esp those without a car to go to the recycling centre. And mercury has an infinite half life, so arguably far worse than any radioisotope as, unlike low level radiation, mercury does stay in the body and build up and cause madness....hello T i m? Been eating the CFLs again? perhaps he's a hatter! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mad_as_a_hatter Read 'Hatters castle' for a truly dark account of mercury poison, religious mania and Scottishness. -- The biggest threat to humanity comes from socialism, which has utterly diverted our attention away from what really matters to our existential survival, to indulging in navel gazing and faux moral investigations into what the world ought to be, whilst we fail utterly to deal with what it actually is. |
#242
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 26/02/2021 00:29, T i m wrote:
How soon after it 'destroyed Manchester' could they rebuild Manchester again? a) Straight away. b) Many years later. c) Neither of the above. There would be an awful lot of nasty stuff floating around in the water from all the destroyed industry, and at the least they'll have to deal with the mud. And assuming they rebuild the dam demand for property might be a bit low. What is it with you people who feel there is a need to try to conflate a man made disaster that is just what it is then goes away ... with a man made disaster that means you can't go near the place for many years after? (And that doesn't only have to be nuclear but that's one of the worst to mange / clear up). 1500+ miles is a long way to walk with a dustpan and brush. Ok, for the hard of thinking, working on the 'what the can go wrong, will go wrong' basis,*anything* that pollutes somewhere in such a way that it can't be inhabited for a very long time, in my book, isn't 'a good thing'? Now, does that mean we have the choice to do without all bad / potentially bad things? No, of course not, but 'most people' would only consider keeping them on whilst there was no alternative. I can promise you, as soon as there is a viable 'alternative' form of energy (to nuclear), we will stop using nuclear, no matter how close (but not at) 100% 'safe' they promise it to be. We have seen such promises before ... My point is not that nuclear is 100% safe. It's just that it doesn't destroy the climate, stop at night or when the weather is wrong, nor have the risks that the Chinese demonstrated so nicely. IMHO It's the least bad alternative. Fusion would be better, especially H-H fusion, not least because the waste is short life and there's no fuel problem. But I'm not going to hold my breath for that. Show me a viable safe alternative and I'll be campaigning outside Sizewell. Andy |
#243
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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T i m wrote
That's why daughter (her group and many others) fast for 24 hours on the 2nd of every month in support for all the animals that are starved before slaughter ... They should be doing that for every day of the month. |
#244
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Sun, 28 Feb 2021 21:20:22 +0000, Vir Campestris
wrote: On 26/02/2021 00:29, T i m wrote: How soon after it 'destroyed Manchester' could they rebuild Manchester again? a) Straight away. b) Many years later. c) Neither of the above. There would be an awful lot of nasty stuff floating around in the water from all the destroyed industry, and at the least they'll have to deal with the mud. And assuming they rebuild the dam demand for property might be a bit low. OOI, how much of what was (conventionally) bombed flat during any war (where the war has stopped) has not been rebuilt pretty quickly? How many of the areas flooded during our floods have just been abandoned for 30+ years? Is all the rubble, glass and insulation from the twin towers still in a heap? My point is whilst I agree there can be some pretty grim stuff kicking about after any major event / disaster / catastrophe, most of it *can* be safely cleaned away by folks with buckets and shovels. What is it with you people who feel there is a need to try to conflate a man made disaster that is just what it is then goes away ... with a man made disaster that means you can't go near the place for many years after? (And that doesn't only have to be nuclear but that's one of the worst to mange / clear up). 1500+ miles is a long way to walk with a dustpan and brush. Ok, for the hard of thinking, working on the 'what the can go wrong, will go wrong' basis,*anything* that pollutes somewhere in such a way that it can't be inhabited for a very long time, in my book, isn't 'a good thing'? Now, does that mean we have the choice to do without all bad / potentially bad things? No, of course not, but 'most people' would only consider keeping them on whilst there was no alternative. I can promise you, as soon as there is a viable 'alternative' form of energy (to nuclear), we will stop using nuclear, no matter how close (but not at) 100% 'safe' they promise it to be. We have seen such promises before ... My point is not that nuclear is 100% safe. Quite. It's just that it doesn't destroy the climate, Well, if we ignore the damage done to the environment done when you make anything, be it a solar panel, wind turbine or nuclear power station (and in their decommissioning ... but where nuclear may have 'extra issues'), neither do solar, wind, hydro etc? stop at night or when the weather is wrong, Different subject. nor have the risks that the Chinese demonstrated so nicely. No, but certainly do have 'risks'. IMHO It's the least bad alternative. Ah, that it may well be, again, until it goes wrong and impacts you or your family. And that 'going wrong' can be in a different country thousands of miles away. Fusion would be better, especially H-H fusion, not least because the waste is short life and there's no fuel problem. Agreed. But I'm not going to hold my breath for that. No, it does look to be a long way off still, well, how they are dealing with it so far. Show me a viable safe alternative and I'll be campaigning outside Sizewell. Again, just because something seems to be the only solution, doesn't justify it's existence, *if* the risks / costs are too great. It's very similar to our keeping of sentient animals to then slaughter and eat when there are *already* alternatives out there, when the mere keeping and feeding them is already causing all of us (humans and the other animals) more issues than the solution it provides. The 'lesser of two evils' in this case would be *having* to kill and exploit sentient creatures, not be doing so as the first choice? Like with consuming animals, consuming fossil fuels have distracted us from doing what we could / should have been doing otherwise. Cheers, T i m |
#245
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Sun, 28 Feb 2021 17:18:48 +0000, bert wrote:
snip Yes, by recycling, easy given they are mostly glass and metal. And which metals would they be? Look at the link you stupid lazy troll. And why 25 years? Approximate life cycle. What, till they are completely dead? Just because they might not be giving 100% of their initial capacity there would be no reason to dispose of them if they were still outputting something? https://www.greenmatch.co.uk/blog/20...s-of-solar-pan el-recycling I also wonder how many CFL bulbs are now ending up in land fill. Oh dear, the poor burke / Spuke troll doesn't even know what CFL stands for ... ![]() 'Compact fluorescent lamp / bulb' ... of did you mean CFBs but I guess more than there might be in landfill if 'people' like you don't dispose of them properly (our local recycling centre has a place for them and plain tubes). Wiki CFL A compact fluorescent lamp (CFL), also called compact fluorescent light What? You really are thick aren't you? Whoosh. What you called them was a 'Compact fluorescent lamp bulb' because you didn't realise that 'CFL' already described them as 'lamps' (they aren't 'bulbs'). You would probably also say '3 am in the morning'. ....' Not as smart as you think. Certainly smarter than you on that. And why focus on CFL's and not smoke detectors and not anything powered by nicad or NiMh cells? 10 year life expectancy Much less of a problem, but a problem just the same. Quite. How many people will simply chuck them in the waste bun esp those without a car to go to the recycling centre. Many (was my prediction), but then your issue is with 'people', not equipment (as may have been some of the issue with Chernobyl). Cheers, T i m |
#246
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 28/02/2021 17:18, bert wrote:
Wiki CFL A compact fluorescent lamp (CFL), also called compact fluorescent light Not as smart as you think. And why focus on CFL's and not smoke detectors and not anything powered by nicad or NiMh cells? 10 year life expectancy Much less of a problem, but a problem just the same. How many people will simply chuck them in the waste bun esp those without a car to go to the recycling centre. Not very environmentally friendly to drive to the recycling centre to dispose of a single CFL; or remote control; or toaster; or any of the other "small electricals". All right for something big like a TV. -- Max Demian |
#247
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 28/02/2021 21:20, Vir Campestris wrote:
My point is not that nuclear is 100% safe. It's just that it doesn't destroy the climate, stop at night or when the weather is wrong, nor have the risks that the Chinese demonstrated so nicely. Neither do coal or gas. Of course its possible that one day a protester might fall off the roof of a nuclear power station and kill themselves, but that is as far as its likely to go in this country. IMHO It's the least bad alternative. Fusion would be better, especially H-H fusion, not least because the waste is short life and there's no fuel problem. But I'm not going to hold my breath for that. No fuel problem on fission either, for the next 10,000 years Show me a viable safe alternative and I'll be campaigning outside Sizewell. Well exactly. -- "The most difficult subjects can be explained to the most slow witted man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the simplest thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid before him." - Leo Tolstoy |
#248
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 28/02/2021 15:53, T i m wrote:
That's why daughter (her group and many others) fast for 24 hours on the 2nd of every month Why don't they do that on the 25th of every month? Oh! That would kinda spoil Christmas. -- Spike |
#249
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Sun, 28 Feb 2021 22:57:22 +0000, Max Demian
wrote: snip Not very environmentally friendly to drive to the recycling centre to dispose of a single CFL; or remote control; or toaster; or any of the other "small electricals". Quite, and why I'm hoping most people wouldn't and would only *drive* them there when going past or there with a general load. All right for something big like a TV. I generally take stuff to pieces before disposing of it because: 1) I am likely to already have it open for faultfinding and so I might retain some of the components for my own use / spares. 2) It means I can then better recycle the stuff, plastics in with the (hard) plastics, metal in the metals etc. 3) I can sell PCB's to a recycler of such (who reclaim the solder and precious metals etc). The local scrap yard also pays a couple of guide for motors, as out of a washing machine etc [1]. 4) I like to see how stuff was built. The last thing I took to bits was a 40" plasma monitor and I was amazed just how packed full of stuff it was (and explained why it was so heavy)! It added a load of (lowish grade unfortunately) PCB's to the box for when I go near the recyclers next and I also got some nice ally sheet, some insulator material sheet and a small box of screws. ;-) Cheers, T i m [1] Our old conventionally vented tumble dryer went wrong (again, but it's very old) a good few months and we just haven't got round to pulling it out and fixing it. All the small stuff can be dried indoors in a room with a de-humidifier and daughter has been doing our bed linen. The other day I rigged up some dryer rails in the de-humidifier room that will easily take the bed linen so we really don't need the TD now. I'm torn if to just use the fact that the TD is 'broken' to strip and recycle it and use the space for a small freezer so I can buy a bit more bulk and cook and freeze more stuff? |
#250
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 01/03/2021 11:46, T i m wrote:
On Sun, 28 Feb 2021 22:57:22 +0000, Max Demian wrote: snip Not very environmentally friendly to drive to the recycling centre to dispose of a single CFL; or remote control; or toaster; or any of the other "small electricals". Quite, and why I'm hoping most people wouldn't and would only *drive* them there when going past or there with a general load. You might rarely/never drive past there. When you did, you probably wouldn't remember the item(s) unless you are organised enough to compile a list, and no-one has moved them from where they are in your house. (I'm thinking of the "small electricals" bins that have a hopper big enough for a VCR, but are not in every supermarket car park.) -- Max Demian |
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