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Thread: Removing Asbestos
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29th November 2011, 10:29 PM #16GOLD MEMBER
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If its pink then its not asbestos and is quite safe to remove yourself without all the scare mongering that has been said here. To back this up, I started my chippy's apprenticeship in 1966 (I was 16) and not long after the pink fibro sheets came on the market and I used and installed heeps of it. I also worked with a lot of the old grey/blue asbestos sheeting with out any protection what so ever. I'm now 62 years old (thats 46 years) and have no health issues what so ever.
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29th November 2011, 10:35 PM #17
It is not what you see but what you don't.
The side effects don't happen now but in 10 - 20 years time.
I spent 16 + years working in boiler houses where the boilers and pipes and flues were lagged with asbestos. Time will tell if I suffer any side effects.
When the professionals remove asbestos material they generally try to seal the area (or room) so particles do not escape. They may also have the area with a slight negative pressure so any loose particles get picked up by filter medium in their air extractor.
If you have asbestos product that needs to be removed - get a licensed contractor. Yes it does cost money but it is better than you or some one you know suffering a lung disorder for many years.
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29th November 2011, 11:17 PM #18
In Australia today it is estimated that about 600 people die each year due to asbestos. Now it can take up to 40 years before you get caught.
When I was young garages blew out brake drums with an air hose, most of that muck was asbestos. We drilled the stuff, sat hot pots on mats of it and my aunts pantry roof was that, and Im sure bits floated into the food.
Now I dont know anybody who has died of asbestos related diseases, and I bet the majority here are like me.
So let us not get this out of proportion it is not common and it is not likely. I should suspect most of us have been exposed at one time or other so lets stop the panic
Asbestos should be respected as the hazzard it is, and extreme care taken to be rid of it. But panic and hysterics is not warranted. Cars on Australian roads kill many more than asbestos and there is no panic about that.
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30th November 2011, 12:53 AM #19GOLD MEMBER
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nicely put
i work in an industry that has had a lot of expositor to asbestos .Story's of eating your lunch sitting on bales of stuff. or sweeping the last remnants of it from a ships hull so i know its a real problem thats why i asked in this place. what people tough of my plans.
ive received great solution's to other problems i have had on here so i thought id ask about this one. so thanks every one. for your input. still haven't really made up my mind.
aaron
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30th November 2011, 12:59 AM #20GOLD MEMBER
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30th November 2011, 11:26 AM #21SENIOR MEMBER
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Nrb
There must be thousands of us that drilled,sawed, broke up asbestos long before we were aware of the danger,but who knows when and if it will come and bite us on bum.
Now we know leave it alone or get help!
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30th November 2011, 04:49 PM #22
SWMBO's company has just had sheets of corrugated asbestos removed from a place she is converting into a market. Big job, and we got professionals in to do it all, as safely as possible. Didn't cost as much as we thought it might. I'd get professionals in to do it for you...
Bob C.
Never give up.
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30th November 2011, 11:30 PM #23GOLD MEMBER
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1st December 2011, 01:08 PM #24If its pink then its not asbestos and is quite safe to remove yourself without all the scare mongering that has been said here. To back this up, I started my chippy's apprenticeship in 1966 (I was 16) and not long after the pink fibro sheets came on the market and I used and installed heeps of it. I also worked with a lot of the old grey/blue asbestos sheeting with out any protection what so ever. I'm now 62 years old (thats 46 years) and have no health issues what so ever.
Rod it wasnt until the early 80's that James Hardie phased out all the azzy. The fact you have no signs of asbestosis does not mean you did not come into contact with it. It may well mean your one of the lucky ones who do not react to it, not every one who comes in contact has an adverse effect. I can think of two cases on tradies who worked with azzy in manufacture with absolutely no ill effects, dying well into thier 80's, plus my own personal experience.
http://asbestosremovalguide.com/446/...ibro-cladding/Last edited by hughie; 1st December 2011 at 01:38 PM. Reason: add a link
Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working. — Pablo Picasso
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1st December 2011, 01:10 PM #25[ my house is about 35 to 40 years old. im not shore when the pink sheets where fitted. you would of seen of seen a few changed in your trade over the years. do you think that the pink non asbestos sheets fit in with the age of my houseInspiration exists, but it has to find you working. — Pablo Picasso
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1st December 2011, 01:15 PM #26work in an industry that has had a lot of expositor to asbestos .Story's of eating your lunch sitting on bales of stuff. or sweeping the last remnants of it from a ships hull so i know its a real problem thats why i asked in this place. what people tough of my plans.
ive received great solution's to other problems i have had on here so i thought id ask about this one. so thanks every one. for your input. still haven't really made up my mind.
]
http://www.asbestosresource.com/asbestosis/
If in doubt get it done properly, in fact many local councils will not let the home owner remove suspected azzy and if caught face a fine.Last edited by hughie; 1st December 2011 at 01:40 PM. Reason: add a link
Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working. — Pablo Picasso
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1st December 2011, 05:54 PM #27
My house was built in 1983 and has fibro sheets in the garage, and both bathrooms.
They contain asbestos. How do I know ?
They have a sticker on the back of the sheets stating they contain asbestos.
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2nd December 2011, 03:31 AM #28GOLD MEMBER
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thanks for the advise guys. its pink hardi flex sheeting. im going to assume its asbestos because i don't know the age of it.
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11th December 2011, 04:02 PM #29Jim
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There's a relevant piece in the news today about the actor Harold Hopkins who has just died at the age of 67. I quote from the ABC:
His family said he contracted the cancer in his first job after high school, when he worked with asbestos sheeting as an apprentice carpenter in south-east Queensland in the early 1960s.
Cheers,
Jim
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11th December 2011, 08:43 PM #30
I believe that even amongst asbestos there are some types that are worse than others. My memory is that "Blue" asbestos is amongst the worst, but they are all insidious: Silent killers: Up there with cigarettes and syphillis in that it lurks dormant for years in the body before manifesting itself in the most hideous manner.
Interesting (but almost beyond belief) to note that both asbestos production and cigarette production are alive and well (actually rampant) in India. Neither are seen as a particular health risk and both are openly marketed and sold.
This same responsible country is now about to buy our uranium (and the uranium from others) to use in a responsible manner. Ummmm...
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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