Hmm...silver is "very toxic in small doses" to microbes...could someone do some math on this? Don12x20: how much silver do you recover on a monthly basis (that would otherwise be released)? How much would it take to slow the digestion of waste in a single septic system, and how much for a treatment plant for a town or city? Does anyone know the "toxicity" level in parts per million? And what else gets pumped into septic systems or the municipal system that hampers bacterial digestion? How much lubricating oil, what quantity of phosphates from laundry, bleach, paint, etc.
I think we need some numbers and probably some perspective before we go making a mountain out of a very tiny molehill.
david
whether it is a mountain out of a molehill,
in some places silver is considered a heavy metal
and against the law to pour used fixer down the drain.
i can not speak for where you live, but where i live
they will fine people lots of money for dumping used fixer.
i know of people who were fined lots of money, and it is no joke.
this thread comes up ( or one just like it ) every few months,
and there are always people who suggest it is just a myth
that used fixer down the drain is bad for the environment, septic, or sewer,
that environmentalists are evil, and governments and governmental agencies
are foolish, for suggesting the dumping heavy metals in the environment is bad.
the argument goes on and on and on about how it is not a problem,
and there are plenty of worse things to pour down the drain
( household cleaners, detergents &C &C &C ) and it is foolish to think that
any used fixer down the drain is a bad thing.
(yawn)
there are close to 26,000 people who are members of apug ( probably more than that
if you include "the lurker" &C ) and if everyone dumped a gallon of spent fixer down the drain
or in the scrub grass, or creek or ... every other week
it adds up. if we are going to be using photochemicals, we should
use them, and dispose of them responsibly.
i have all my used chemicals hauled away.