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#51
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"Roger" wrote in message
... Leak? I was raised in rural Michigan. In the 40's and 50's they used to *spray* the gravel roads with brine and/or oil. In many places they even used what was affectionately known as "drip". Ever hear a car run on that stuff? :-)) When changing the oil in cars and tractors people were encouraged to spread it on the gravel roads to keep the dust down. The brine truck used to make at least two trips a summer down our road. Most of the foundation for older roads around here has two or three heavy coats of brine. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Roger If it weren't for brine, there'd be no Dow and if there were no Dow there'd probably be no Midland. http://www.geo.msu.edu/geo333/dow.html I can still hear my boss's voice on the Corporate History piece we did: "It was in 1897 that Herbert Dow discovered Brine buried in pockets deep beneath the Earth..." Jay Beckman PP-ASEL Chandler, AZ (Production Intern - Dow Chemical Co. PR Dept. Midland, MI - '84/'85) |
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Roger wrote in
: Snipola A news report some years back stated that every year Americans throw more oil out into the woods and/or roads than was lost in the Exxon Valdez (sp?) incident. I'm not surprised. It's so damned hard to "properly" dispose of used oil if you do your own changing. I'm speaking of the common person that liks to change the oil in their car instead of paying some drop out 50 bucks to not put the drain plug back in properly. I live in an LA suburb and I've always had trouble finding a place to dispose of my used oil. Places either charge, or you have to use a special certified container to bring it in. Oh, and of course they just happen to sell these special certified containers for a "nominal" fee, of course. I bet 99% of people who change their own oil end up putting the used stuff in the same bottles they just poured the new stuff out of. Why can't you turn it in like that? I'm not kidding! I've been turned away before. "Not approved." So, I end up with gallons of used oil sitting in my garage until the city has one of those free "bring anything" trash collection sites set up for a couple days every few years. Brian -- http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? Like censorship and not getting support help? Switch to Supernews! They won't even answer questions through your ISP! |
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"Morgans" wrote in message
... "Jay Beckman" wrote If it weren't for brine, there'd be no Dow and if there were no Dow there'd probably be no Midland. Harumph. I had no idea that there was brine in Michigan, and that started Dow. Learn something new every day. Some days. I wouldn't want to be "too" smart. g -- Jim in NC Little known and lesser cared about trivia ... Probably the only thing I took with me from my short stint in Midland. My internship supervisor was "old school" having worked his way up through the ranks as a "one man band" street reporter shooting stories on 16mm film and was sure I'd never amount to much. 20 years (11 at the network level), 7 Emmy Awards (self agrandizement...sorry), and my PP-ASEL later ... well it just goes to show you never know... LOL! ;O) Jay B |
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![]() "Jay Beckman" wrote If it weren't for brine, there'd be no Dow and if there were no Dow there'd probably be no Midland. Harumph. I had no idea that there was brine in Michigan, and that started Dow. Learn something new every day. Some days. I wouldn't want to be "too" smart. g -- Jim in NC |
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![]() "Skywise" wrote I live in an LA suburb and I've always had trouble finding a place to dispose of my used oil. Places either charge, or you have to use a special certified container to bring it in. You kalifornians need to get real with all of your green laws that are counter productive. Here, you can bring oil in to about any auto parts store, in anything you want to bring it in. How can that be bad? -- Jim in NC |
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On Thu, 8 Dec 2005 23:11:33 -0700, "Jay Beckman"
wrote: "Roger" wrote in message .. . Leak? I was raised in rural Michigan. In the 40's and 50's they used to *spray* the gravel roads with brine and/or oil. In many places they even used what was affectionately known as "drip". Ever hear a car run on that stuff? :-)) When changing the oil in cars and tractors people were encouraged to spread it on the gravel roads to keep the dust down. The brine truck used to make at least two trips a summer down our road. Most of the foundation for older roads around here has two or three heavy coats of brine. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Roger If it weren't for brine, there'd be no Dow and if there were no Dow there'd probably be no Midland. http://www.geo.msu.edu/geo333/dow.html I can still hear my boss's voice on the Corporate History piece we did: "It was in 1897 that Herbert Dow discovered Brine buried in pockets deep beneath the Earth..." Deep? The stuff is so close to the surface around here probably 10 to 20% of the home water wells are brine producers. Anything over 150 feet is quite likely to hit brine instead of clean water. Dow used the brine to produce Bromine. The original well has been rebuilt and stands between main street and the river about a mile to the NW of the business district and next to the corner of North wood University. BTW, the original oil fields in this area were only 500 to 1500 feet deep. There is also a very large coal deposit that under lays most of the Saginaw valley. The vein is at its thickest and deepest in this area at roughly 400 feet plus change.It's very close to the surface of the shale and there is almost 400 feet of sand, gravel, and clay (full of water) on top of that. Of course the coal, like the oil has very high sulfur content and the coal vein is only about 3' thick at the thickest. It's also very soft coal. OTOH there are many hundreds of square miles of the stuff. It comes to the surface at the north side of the valley and can be seen in rock outcroppings where it's only a few inches thick. When I say valley, don't think in terms of Colorado or Kentucky. At its widest the valley must be close to 100 miles across and is only a couple hundred feet deep. Unless you are watching you can drive out of it and never be aware you left. I used to live 65 miles from work. The last 5 miles on the way home were where US-10 climbed out of the valley just west of Farwell MI. We lived just about 300 to 400 yards west of the top of Michigan's "continental divide". There was a 200' plus radio tower on the top of the hill and I climbed that thing many a time. One day I was up there and heard a jet coming. I kept looking, but no jet. Then I looked to the west and down. He was less than a mile west and about 100 feet below me and really hauling. There is an MOA there, but the base is 7000 feet. One night I woke around midnight to the sound of a very loud prop plane. I rolled over and looked out the bedroom window which faced east and the tower just in time to see what appeared to be a Beech 18 headed south just above the tops of the trees between us and the tower. He had to have been with in 100 feet of the guy lines. He was close enough I could see the sparks and fire coming out of the exhaust stacks. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Jay Beckman PP-ASEL Chandler, AZ (Production Intern - Dow Chemical Co. PR Dept. Midland, MI - '84/'85) |
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On Fri, 9 Dec 2005 01:07:38 -0500, "Morgans"
wrote: "Roger" wrote I was raided in rural Michigan. I hope that being "raided" didn't set your development back too far! BFG That happens at 4:00 AM. In the 40's and 50's they used to *spray* the gravel roads with brine and/or oil. I too remember the oil spraying. In many places they even used what was affectionately known as "drip". Ever hear a car run on that stuff? :-)) Now, I'm clueless when you speak of "drip." What is it? The "low boilers" driectly off the oil wells. Lots of Naptha and other good *stuff*. Spark knock like crazy, foul the plugs, backfie through the carb and bark out the exhaust. When times were tough people used to slip up to the tanks and drain off a bit. You could tell by the noise (and smell) who was burning the stuff. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com When changing the oil in cars and tractors people were encouraged to spread it on the gravel roads to keep the dust down. The brine truck used to make at least two trips a summer down our road. Brine? As in sal****er, or something else? Most of the foundation for older roads around here has two or three heavy coats of brine. That sounds like the tar oil type of stuff, like they still use between coats of bitumenous (sp?) concrete. (asphalt) I'm surprised you know about all of this road stuff. Did they really have cars, back when you grew up? g,dr -- Jim in NC |
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On Thu, 8 Dec 2005 23:11:33 -0700, "Jay Beckman"
wrote: "Roger" wrote in message .. . Leak? I was raised in rural Michigan. In the 40's and 50's they used to *spray* the gravel roads with brine and/or oil. In many places they even used what was affectionately known as "drip". Ever hear a car run on that stuff? :-)) When changing the oil in cars and tractors people were encouraged to spread it on the gravel roads to keep the dust down. The brine truck used to make at least two trips a summer down our road. Most of the foundation for older roads around here has two or three heavy coats of brine. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Roger If it weren't for brine, there'd be no Dow and if there were no Dow there'd probably be no Midland. If you've been back recently you would see Dow is only a shadow of it's former self. Back in the 50's and 60's they had an hourly work force of over 7,000. I think it was 75090 or 7600. I'd guess that all of the current Midland work force including supervision is less than a quarter of that. People complain about the traffic on M-20 now, but they should have see it in the mornings and afternoons around shift change time. It's a 5 lane high way now. Back then it was only two lanes and no stop lights. http://www.geo.msu.edu/geo333/dow.html I can still hear my boss's voice on the Corporate History piece we did: "It was in 1897 that Herbert Dow discovered Brine buried in pockets deep beneath the Earth..." Jay Beckman PP-ASEL Chandler, AZ (Production Intern - Dow Chemical Co. PR Dept. Midland, MI - '84/'85) 84 - 85 I was an Instrument man out at Hemi-Semi. Quit and went back to college full time in 87. They are now the world's largest producer of poly crystalline Silicon and they just announced an expansion that will double the size of the plant. I'm not sure of the output any more, but it's in the thousands of metric tons per year. That is a *lot* of transistors. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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On Sun, 04 Dec 2005 02:43:07 GMT, "Jay Honeck"
wrote: Worst case: Aviation gets another black eye, and the FAA ends up being liable for "contamination" at every airport in America. I wouldn't think that a likely scenario since the FAA doesn't run/operate/own any airports. I hope you're right, but.... The FAA is the over-arching, controlling agency here. EPA doesn't own any old, abandoned gas stations (with leaky underground tanks), but they're responsible for cleaning them up, right? EPA is responsible for finding "someone" to blame, fine, and force to do the clean up, or pay for it on top of the fine. In the case of a city owned airport it's going to be the city and that means the tax payers. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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On Wed, 07 Dec 2005 03:06:14 GMT, George Patterson
wrote: wrote: But those airports don't sit in the water supply for 7 million people. Chicago used to pull its water from the river and dump its sewage in the lake. This has changed? I think they changed the order. In from the lake and out into the river? Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
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