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Rosalie
Okay, someone else also mentioned linseed oil. The problem is that in all the shops where I've been where oily rags were generated, none of them had linseed oil on them except in oil painting. In every other case it was either mineral oil or other petroleum-based oils. Yet we always had to put them in the "Oily Rags Can," which as I recall was a can with water in it, for pick-up by the shop-rag service. On the boat I use Penetrol quite a bit -- which may very well have linseed oil in it -- and they specifically warn about spontaneous combustion with it. -- Karin Conover-Lewis Fair and Balanced since 1959 klc dot lewis at centurytel dot net "Rosalie B." wrote in message ... x-no-archive:yes "Karin Conover-Lewis" wrote: This raises a question that I've had for a long time -- re "oily rags." I've always been taught they are a fire hazard, since they can spontaneously combust. Yet one cannot help but have oily rags on a boat when doing any kind of work around the engine, keeping tools from rusting, etc. So what's the best way to SAFELY store them? The lubberly method of keeping them in buckets of water won't work for obvious reasons. The oil that causes spontaneous combustion is vegetable type oil like linseed oil in particular, not mineral or petroleum based oil. Linseed oil is used in some varnishes and paints. In order to have the spontaneous combustion you have to have air -that's why storing them under water works. An air tight container also works. But what's easier is to lay the rags flat to dry out because that way they aren't close enough together to let heat build up. This is a quote about boiled linseed oil from http://yarchive.net/air/linseed_oil.html "Boiled" is not what most people think; it should actually be called "de-gassed" since the "boiling" is done by vacuum at room temperature. It just takes the dissolved air out (the "boiling" is just the gases expanding and breaking as bubbles), and makes the linseed oil less likely to cause spontaneous combustion when oily rags are left wadded up. (Remember "spontaneous combustion" warnings about oily rags? They never managed to mention that linseed oil is the *only* oil you need to worry about, and the only oil you were likely to generate oily rags with that you were likely to store wadded up overnight for use the next day.)... BTW, I swear by linseed oil as an anti-corrosive coating. I use it on aluminum, *especially* externally where there have been white patches- I sand off the white oxide and then coat with a thin layer of linseed oil to occlude and passivate pinhole craters. It weathers away and need to be reapplied, though you can get it off quickly with a little paint remover when you need too. Craig Wall grandma Rosalie |
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