One of the things I'd completely forgotten during this discussion is that some companies (only one I know of for sure is PPG) have been introducing, in the last year or two, water-based urethanes and
michael & nolan : i don't know whether waterborne paints are safer, but i do know that there are people out there who say that they are not. the idea is that water can be absorbed through the skin mo
From my "reckoning", the water just replaces the solvent which makes it environmentally friendlier. (rather than three litres of solvent evaporating every time you paint a car, it's three litres of w
Author: "PHINNEY,HARRY K (HP-Corvallis,ex1)" <harry_phinney@hp.com>
Date: Wed, 28 Feb 2001 13:49:38 -0800
lightly. filter I'd be very interested to read a reference stating that as fact. I know that respirator manufacturers generally will not recommend them anymore, but I still have not read anything aut
respirators were 110% effective at removing isocyanates. The masks would still leak slightly. So the only safe approach uses a positive air pressure mask. So what would one use in the absence of the