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PCB's
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To: mail11:;-at-msd26.enet.dec-dot-com (-at-teslatech)
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Subject: PCB's
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From: "I am the NRA." <pierson-at-msd26.enet.dec-dot-com>
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Date: Wed, 20 Sep 95 16:05:46 EDT
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Cc: pierson-at-msd26.enet.dec-dot-com
[I am NOT an expert but have done a bit of reading in this area.]
>about pcb's : I was told when I got an old xformer that had been
>constructed in the 50's and has some pcb-oil as insulation that
>pcb's aren't really that dangerous unless you drink the oil :)
So said the salesman.
>or _burn_ it
PCBs are used because they DON'T burn. If something else in a PCB
cooled/insulated transformer burns, OR if the PCB's overheat to the
point that teh case ruptures (or the vetn fails or.... The PCBs
get somewhat vaporized & somewhat aerosolled & can get ingested/inhaled.
> - that's how the nasties are formed according to him..
My reading indicates something more subtle:
PCB means Poly Chlorinated BiPhenyl. Which means a biphenyl with
somewhere between 2 and "poly" Cl attached. The usual soup is a mix,
because, for electrical purposes (insulation/cooling) the purity in
this regard is not that important. SOME of the highly Chlorinated
biphenyls are nasty. Most of lower ones are not. Or so i recall.
Also, there are some random trace "whoknowswhat" from the production
process that don't hurt the operational characteristics, so they get
left in...
For myself, i would not use them. If the seal is good... Also
_modern_ "transformer oils" have a different chemistry.
regards
dwp