Liquid Mercury lead removal

Just to beat another horse, lead poisoning from constant use of an indoor range is also a significant health risk. We used to get that heavy metal test (it's urine, not blood, and you get to keep a big jug of pee in your refrigerator for the weekend) every year courtesy of the government . . .

I stand corrected; pee test; thank you.
 
Mercury and Lead

Well.... this indeed is an old thread and so am i. I use mercury to clean my LEAD barrels all the time and have been since the 70's. Yes..back then, all of us 'hippies' did smoke pot and used mercury on our barrels. Most are now Senators and congressmen and we all have kids that did NOT come out looking like salamanders. So..where are we here with MERCURY. Well, don't drink it, feed it to your kids or pets, keep it in a close glass bottle and don't spill it and you and guns and kids will be fine. I have a bottle from the manometers we used at work,,,say about 60 to 70 of them in the field in a refinery, and just don't be stupid with it and you'll be fine. I smelt alot of lead and corruption and make about 4000 to 3k lead boolits every year (and for the past 30 or so years) and 'don't sniff the fumes, don't eat the lead, and don't drink the mercury' and I am still alive and cognizant. Have 2 upper division degrees awarded by state universities and really believe drinking DDT, bathing in Mercury, soaking ones feet in pesticides and other available chemicals from Home Depot is not good for anyone's general health. I too 'plug and soak' my old leaded barrels in mercury over night, scrub with brass cloth and save and keep for disposal all materials used via my towns 'hazzard' waste service. simply...'bag and tag' and take it to them. I have the same one pound bottle of mercury i had from the refinery from the 70's. it is a few ounces lighter from my responsible use and disposal. So...here...my opinion is... well... "Being stupid is being stupid'. Use your head...keep things 'clean and straight' and you won't have any $50K house cleaning issues as described above. Oh yea.... and if you want to toke some pot...(as most of us did in the 60-70's) well ...can now go to Colorado and toke up and not get thrown in the slammer. So..where are we here with being stupid?
Nose Dive....
Cheap, Fast, Good. Kindly Pick two
 
While mercury may work here's something to consider. What about the tiny bit that you don't get out of the gun? When you fire the revolver that bit gets atomized and blown out the tube. Then it becomes a serious inhalation hazard. There's many good lead solvents on the market that if you use them properly will cut the lead out without using mercury. Some are even labeled as non toxic.
 
While mercury may work here's something to consider. What about the tiny bit that you don't get out of the gun? When you fire the revolver that bit gets atomized and blown out the tube. Then it becomes a serious inhalation hazard. There's many good lead solvents on the market that if you use them properly will cut the lead out without using mercury. Some are even labeled as non toxic.
Never thought of that, but it makes sense.
So you're not just exposing yourself, you're exposing others too.
You may be OK with the risks, but maybe they aren't.
Seems to me like that would be one more good reason not to do it.

BTW, like with just about anything else, no two people have exactly the same susceptibility or tolerance levels. What doesn't bother you might make me sick - like pollen, or hay fever, or cigarette smoke or allergies. People with extreme sensitivities might be severely affected by levels that wouldn't have any negative effects on someone else.
 
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I'd be the first to agree with the hazards of mercury but back
in the 70s(when I was really dumb). I used it to clean out the
barrel of a M27 with an 8-3/8" barrel that was almost
plugged from lead. I mean it cleaned it quick and it cleaned
it thoroughly! This was from hi velocity cast lead bullets that
we're too soft. I was new to reloading,also:o
 
Just to beat another horse, lead poisoning from constant use of an indoor range is also a significant health risk. We used to get that heavy metal test (it's urine, not blood, and you get to keep a big jug of pee in your refrigerator for the weekend) every year courtesy of the government . . .

It may have been a urine test at one time, but I can guarantee you it's a blood test now. I get one every year as part of my annual physical and I can watch my serum (blood) lead level change based on how much time I've spent in the indoor range and how good I've been about wearing a respirator when I'm there. The CDC issues guidelines in terms of serum lead level, not urine (it's currently <10 mcg/dl for adults, less for children).
 
A pound will last the rest of your life. Since Mercury does not give off vapors, unless heated quite hot, the hazard is by absorption through the skin, or contaminated dietary sources

There's quite a lot of information online regarding the inhalation (vapor) risk from elemental ("quick silver") mercury.

PubMed abstract on treating family for inhalation ingestion of elemental mercury:

Mercury vapor inhalation and poisoning of a family. - PubMed - NCBI

Numerous cites for inhalation of elemental mercury, on this
wiki page:

Mercury poisoning - Wikipedia
 
I'd be the first to agree with the hazards of mercury but back
in the 70s(when I was really dumb). I used it to clean out the
barrel of a M27 with an 8-3/8" barrel that was almost
plugged from lead. I mean it cleaned it quick and it cleaned
it thoroughly! This was from hi velocity cast lead bullets that
we're too soft. I was new to reloading,also:o

Yeah, there is no question about it being effective. It is for sure.
The big question is whether or not you feel the risk level is acceptable.

My biggest concern is based on the fact that you don't see the effects now or tomorrow or next week. The effects happen years after the exposure and by then it is WAY too late to do anything about it.
 
How does one dispose of a bottle of mercury. I have a pint.

I'd check with the local landfill to see if they have a haz-mat collection & disposal site. Most do - they'd rather give people a way to safely dispose of haz-mats - instead of having them just dump them in with the regular trash.
 
and a good way to turn your home into an unsellable toxic waste site.

If you live in Jersey, you may already have this angle covered.;)

Thanks for all your input; I'll keep it in mind when I find some mercury and get my cylinders lead free for sure.

To the paranoid ones on this thread, NEVER fire you gun in an enclosed area and NEVER have the wind or a breeze blowing towards you when firing a gun. The fumes cause serious cumulative harm to your body and can make you crazy enough to be paranoid about carefully using mercury. Get a blood test to detect the heavy meals in your blood to see if this is why you act this way.

Two words just leap into my mind when I read comments like this. Darwin Award!

For the life of me, I don't understand why anybody would dink around with Mercury or the infamous vinegar/hydrogen peroxide solution when completely safe and relatively easy solutions to lead fouling problems exist. Either the age old Lewis Lead Remover or a Chore Boy wrapped bronze brush will work just fine. You can make things even easier for the latter method by soaking the bore overnight in Kroil.

Bruce
 
Two words just leap into my mind when I read comments like this. Darwin Award!
LOL, I know what you mean.

Kinda reminds me of my dad who swore up-and-down right up til the day he died - at 63 years young - that smoking a pack a day wasn't really that bad for his health!

He died of congestive heart failure and lymphoma two months before his 64th birthday...
 
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