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but what kind of goop came off in it when it was used for stripping parts?





Iron, and the stuff you were going to scrape off anyways. Once neutralized, no big deal.




Maybe, although the neutralizing itself does little to remove potential heavy metal toxicity, and technically, its far from legal to dump or dispose of haphazardly of any of the waste product.




Virtually everything you stated is incorrect.




We are talking about the location being in the US, in 2014, correct?

Care to stick around and back up that blanket statement?


So do you care to explain to us less informed how a heavy metal is rendered non toxic by a "neutralization"?


Or explain how any involved regulatory agency will turn a blind eye to haphazard disposal of the remnants/byproducts of a unregistered personal metal acid cleaning operation?

And explain how anybody here can tell with certainty what materials, surface or base metal alloys they are removing from a dirty item without any testing?


Reality check, that half the population is smarter then 50% of the people and it's a constantly contested fact.