Sorry for the late comment:
Originally Posted by
Scrap man
So I scored a CRT monitor and a
microwave from trash night yesterday, and I start taking apart the monitor (as my basement is slowly flooding). My father comes down and tells me that the monitor tube has some kind of poison gas in it and that the microwave has some radioactive thing in it. Are either of these true?
Both statements are 100% false. The CRT is a vacuum tube, so there is actually no gas inside of it whatsoever.
The microwave has nothing radioactive inside of it at all, but rather generates microwaves from a very large voltage (which is why it needs such a large transformer).
BOTH OF THEM HAVE CAPACITORS! The capacitors will hold charge for between 2days-2weeks depending on type, and, if anything, that makes them dangerous.
As for the beryllium oxide in the magnetron, it isn't harmful unless its airborne or ingested (just like lead or mercury). That little pink thing is what they consider dangerous if you breath it in. So — don't smash it with a hammer and breath it in. Other then that they are pretty safe.
There is no doubt in my mind that just using an angle-grinder or sawzall is just as, if not more dangerous then scrapping a microwave or a CRT; but you won't hear anybody here saying not to use them!
Good Luck scrapping!
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