Kino
Subscriber
i just used the name instead of typing in "what's his face"
i mean no disrespect to any of the joe's out there
Sorry, that was unnecessarily snotty on my part. I understood what you meant; apologies...
i just used the name instead of typing in "what's his face"
i mean no disrespect to any of the joe's out there
We used a cation exchange resin on the Lipsner Smith Film Cleaning machines; wonder if that was one of them?
Found this: http://www.massengineers.com/Documents/PDF/ion excangers.pdf
any relevance to our topic?
Sorry, that was unnecessarily snotty on my part. I understood what you meant; apologies...
Sometimes reusing is better than recycling. I've refilled my HP laser toner cartridges for many years. Refilled cartridges suffice for most uses. Likewise, instead of recycling tin cans and plastic and glass bottles and buying them back as remanufactured products, they can be used or adapted in many applications. Sixtyfive years ago, when America didn't have the option of dumping our waste overseas, we said, "Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without." That saves money and the environment today, too.
Refilled dye cartridges may not contain the same generation of ink dye as the one supplied by the printer manufacturer, and therefore image stability may suffer.
PE
My posts are regarding a toner cartridge for a B&W laser printer.
...but wouldn't it be more cost effective to have things carted away or use a trickle tank? it really isn't too much effort or cost ...
OK, I contacted the utility service that provides our sewer treatment. I cannot dispose of spent developer and fixer down the drain. I need to treat it or take it to a treatment center, get an account, etc. I want to look into treating it.
So I have looked at the water purification section of the local big-box hardware store and I see filters that will remove organic compounds, and I can certainly use the iron wool or aluminum foil process for removing silver. I ran university research lab for several years where we processed our own water using these types of cartidge filters (several types in series, each providing a different filtering effect), but those filters operated under pressure... the normal pressure of a city water system.
Will these filters from the hardware store work if the solution is simply gravity fed... a holding tank connected to a filter draining into another holding tank? Or does it need to be pressurized? Should I consider something else?
I admit that I know nothing about this kind of setup and my question may be dumb...
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |