Was reading that states are starting to outlaw coal tar black top sealer. Guess Canada is nation wide with the ban. Said something today to the store where I purchased some and they confirmed it may happen.
What will take it place?
Was reading that states are starting to outlaw coal tar black top sealer. Guess Canada is nation wide with the ban. Said something today to the store where I purchased some and they confirmed it may happen.
What will take it place?
"Remember back in the day, when things were made by hand, and people took pride in their work?"
- Rick Dale
Yep, looks to be true. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42917004.../#.TkSQqmvF-Uk http://www.paint.org/news/industry-n...king-lots.html
I will reserve comment as I have nothing positive to say.
It's a changing world we live in.
Remember folks, we don't do politics at the Creek.
Lead paint was a brilliant idea at one time too.
Measure twice, cut three times, start over. Repeat as necessary.
Jackie Mason, a brilliant man, once said: "It's not a matter of being healthy anymore. It's about choosing an illness you like".
***crawling back into my radon infested cave while I still can***
Sure am glad I have a concrete drive........
I would be willing to bet there will be a alternative on the market before the last coal tar dries.
Larry
Actually there are several alternatives to coal tar driveway sealers. An asphalt emulsion which is almost the same thing as the original binder used in the hot mix and a latex type. They both work well. The advantage to the coal tar is that petroleum products do not melt or soften it. But the problem with coal tar is that it is a proven carcinogen. You name the cancer and it will help cause it.
I've never sealed my driveway and neither have my parents sealed their driveway. I've heard over the years that sealing a driveway with the stuff in a can has no benefits to the life of the driveway. About the only thing you are doing is making it look better by being blacker.
The only kind of sealer that is supposed to help are the companies that actually use machines to apply a hot sealer. The problem is companies charge $1000 and up for the service.
I can't see anything good about the coal tar stuff other than that it makes pavement black.
Birth defects, lower IQ, cancer...steep price to make a drive look black to impress other people.
I have read the same thing about no benefit to sealing your drive. But I would have to disagree. It fills in the small hairline cracks. That has to keep freezing water out in the winter. No way around it.
"Remember back in the day, when things were made by hand, and people took pride in their work?"
- Rick Dale
Craig Matheny
Anaheim, Ca
45 watt Epilog Laser, 60 watt Epilog Laser,
Plasma Cutter, MiG Welder
Rikon 70-100 Lathe
Shop Smith V510, To many hand Tools and
Universal Repair Kit (1- Hammer and 1- Roll of Duck Tape)
Epilog 24TT(somewhere between 35-45 watts), CorelX4, Photograv(the old one, it works!), HotStamping, Pantograph, Vulcanizer, PolymerPlatemaker, Sandblasting Cabinet, and a 30 year collection of Assorted 'Junque'
Every time you make a typo, the errorists win
I Have to think outside the box.. I don't fit in it anymore
Experience is a wonderful thing.
It enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.
Every silver lining has a cloud around it
lead paint is superior to any modern paint, it's still a good idea .
you can reproduce the mixtures (it was just pigment and linseed oil) but they wind up being awfully mold/mildew happy. the toxicity of the lead made it work.
the original lead paint on my soffits and exposed rafters is doing fine after ~103 years. no modern consumer-available paint lasts that long.