Purple-Days said:
That is the brass tubing you tested. It is declared Lead free and you tested it and it is Lead free. Where is the surprise? Take your unit apart and test the heat sink and you will get the same results that I did.
See post #94 where Rick ignores the other portions of the airpath? Same as you are doing.
I stopped reading at this point because I cam across another untruth.
You keep saying Rick is not mentioning the heatsink.
From post #83
Rick said:
The tubing size quoted was everything I use that is in the vapor path except the heatsink which(just checked) is the same alloy.
Now, like the time you lied about me, you may try to say you didn't see that post. You may also try to say you were unaware of the discussion following the above post about whether one C260 alloy has the same amount of lead as another C260 alloy. But I'd like to save you the energy and embarrassment of concocting another falsehood.
Purple-Days said:
The metals we are talking about are alloys. Finally
(see post #3) Rick finds the alloy numbers (C260) and shares them, on
one portion of his airpath, the tubing. (BTW there are other components to Rick's airpath. The top disk and sleeve are not mentioned at all.
)
As stated the heatsink is c260 so the alloy is the same and has the properties listed below.
So
the following only
applies to the tubing and
heat sink.
BTW alloy numbers are there so that you know what you are buying.
C260 is C260 is C260.
Tom, you are not an honest broker in this discussion (neither is Lwien see posts 148 and 165 for explanation). There is a glaring conflict of interest.
If the truth is on your side there is no need to lie. Yet you do it time and again. And the really big question is, why do you do it when it is so easily disproved?
I won't participate in this thread any longer until we can have an actual honest debate with people who have nothing to gain from a declaration that brass is unsafe. Actually, I don't care about a seeming conflict of interest as long as the party behaves objectively. Hell, they don't have to be objective as long as they tell the truth.
Besides, I don't know what is left to debate. We knew there was lead, we now know the quantity, .07%.
We know C260 brass is acceptable, by far, under RoHS guidelines allowing up to .4% (if I remember correctly. I made a previous post with links) as well as California guidelines allowing up to .25% (still going by memory). It is still a matter of personal decision making as to whether those levels are acceptable.