โNov-14-2016 09:27 AM
โNov-14-2016 01:57 PM
Horizon170 wrote:Old-Biscuit wrote:
After all the years of drinking hot water from a rubber garden hose, eating/chewing on lead based paint growing up, wallowing in Red Lead paint in NAVY bilges along with the 30 yrs exposure to asbestos I doubt a little lead leaching from a brass fixture is going to cause ME an issues.
My Immune System was heavily assaulted and has survived.....:B
Don't forget the Mercury we poured into our palms and rubbed pennies in it to make them shinny, and biting lead split shot on fishing lines.:B
โNov-14-2016 11:51 AM
Horizon170 wrote:Oh boy, does that bring back memories. ๐Old-Biscuit wrote:
After all the years of drinking hot water from a rubber garden hose, eating/chewing on lead based paint growing up, wallowing in Red Lead paint in NAVY bilges along with the 30 yrs exposure to asbestos I doubt a little lead leaching from a brass fixture is going to cause ME an issues.
My Immune System was heavily assaulted and has survived.....:B
Don't forget the Mercury we poured into our palms and rubbed pennies in it to make them shinny, and biting lead split shot on fishing lines.:B
โNov-14-2016 11:44 AM
โNov-14-2016 11:42 AM
โNov-14-2016 11:33 AM
Old-Biscuit wrote:
After all the years of drinking hot water from a rubber garden hose, eating/chewing on lead based paint growing up, wallowing in Red Lead paint in NAVY bilges along with the 30 yrs exposure to asbestos I doubt a little lead leaching from a brass fixture is going to cause ME an issues.
My Immune System was heavily assaulted and has survived.....:B
โNov-14-2016 11:19 AM
garyemunson wrote:
Remember, the first bit of water to come out of a faucet after sitting a while may test high for lead but just a few seconds of flushing the water standing in the fixture should provide water meeting the supplier's specs. I doubt water passing through a fixture picks up any testable level of lead contamination.
โNov-14-2016 10:14 AM
โNov-14-2016 09:42 AM
โNov-14-2016 09:41 AM