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#71
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#73
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On 24/08/2012 01:23, in article , "Ian"
wrote: In message , Bill Findlay writes On 24/08/2012 00:19, in article , "Ian" wrote: In message , Bill Findlay writes On 23/08/2012 09:57, in article , "Richard Tobin" wrote: There's a flat in a Glasgow tenement that's been preserved as a museum. ... Now I think about it, I don't recall a bathroom, so it may be one of those with a shared toilet that you described. Obviously Glasgow had a higher proportion of working-class tenements than Edinburgh. It does have a bathroom. My maternal grandparents lived in a tenement in Clydebank, opposite John Browns shipyard. The communal toilet was outside, just past the communal wash-house. The bathroom was a tin bath in the same room as the bed, and everything else. Until I was 9 I lived in a 4th floor tenement flat that shared a cold-water toulet on the half-landing with the flat next door. In winter the water in the cistern would freeze; in summer the cistern was used as a nesting perch by the doos. I well remember the tin bath in front of the kitchen fire. I forgot to mention, my Grandparents had 13 children. Mine too. 8-) -- Bill Findlay with blueyonder.co.uk; use surname & forename; |
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#74
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In article , Davey wrote:
My area in East Anglia: "Your water is Very Hard at 172 mg/l as calcium." Epping, which is nearer to London, has only 140 mg/l Ca/l or 350 mg/l CaCo3. Described as 'hard'. But then, the Victoria/Parliament area of London is reported as 270 CaCo3, but only 'Hard.' Now that's confusing. Maybe the denizens of the Victoria/Parliament area of London have thicker skins? Rod. -- |
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#75
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Davey wrote:
My area in East Anglia: "Your water is Very Hard at 172 mg/l as calcium." i.e. 430 mg/l CaCO3 Epping, which is nearer to London, has only 140 mg/l Ca/l or 350 mg/l CaCo3. Described as 'hard'. But then, the Victoria/Parliament area of London is reported as 270 CaCo3, but only 'Hard.' Now that's confusing. Not really, it seems the threshold between "hard" and "very hard" lies somewhere between 350 and 430 mg/ml CaCO3 |
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#76
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On Fri, 24 Aug 2012 10:18:04 +0100
Roderick Stewart wrote: In article , Davey wrote: My area in East Anglia: "Your water is Very Hard at 172 mg/l as calcium." Epping, which is nearer to London, has only 140 mg/l Ca/l or 350 mg/l CaCo3. Described as 'hard'. But then, the Victoria/Parliament area of London is reported as 270 CaCo3, but only 'Hard.' Now that's confusing. Maybe the denizens of the Victoria/Parliament area of London have thicker skins? Rod. -- It's where my bank is.... -- Davey. |
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#77
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On Fri, 24 Aug 2012 10:40:54 +0100
Andy Burns wrote: Davey wrote: My area in East Anglia: "Your water is Very Hard at 172 mg/l as calcium." i.e. 430 mg/l CaCO3 Epping, which is nearer to London, has only 140 mg/l Ca/l or 350 mg/l CaCo3. Described as 'hard'. But then, the Victoria/Parliament area of London is reported as 270 CaCo3, but only 'Hard.' Now that's confusing. Not really, it seems the threshold between "hard" and "very hard" lies somewhere between 350 and 430 mg/ml CaCO3 Yes, re-reading it in the cold light of day, it makes more sense. It was the use of both Ca and CaCO3 that confused me, I think. That, and the hour of day at which I was looking at it. But it does at least confirm that here in East Anglia, we have "Very Hard" water. Hence the prevalence of water softeners. -- Davey. |
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#78
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In article ,
Bill Findlay wrote: Until I was 9 I lived in a 4th floor tenement flat that shared a cold-water toulet on the half-landing with the flat next door. In winter the water in the cistern would freeze; in summer the cistern was used as a nesting perch by the doos. I well remember the tin bath in front of the kitchen fire. That's the type I remember from Aberdeen. -- *A nest isn't empty until all their stuff is out of the attic Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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#79
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On 21/08/2012 21:34, Martin wrote:
On Tue, 21 Aug 2012 00:02:41 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Andy Champ wrote: On 20/08/2012 18:37, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: Most run a fresh water tap before drinking from it - or even filling the kettle. He'd have to run it a long time to drop the lead level in the lead-lined tank... Indeed. I'm amazed such things still existed in a tenement - they're not exactly a tower block. They are common in Victorian buildings. They are zinc coated not lead coated. That doesn't sound like this one, it was more like a big shallow wooden crate with soft lead pushed into it and nailed on around the top. There was no 'coating' AFAICS. Z |
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#80
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Davey wrote:
Andy Burns wrote: it seems the threshold between "hard" and "very hard" lies somewhere between 350 and 430 mg/ml CaCO3 Yes, re-reading it in the cold light of day, it makes more sense. It was the use of both Ca and CaCO3 that confused me, I think. The molecular weight of a compound such as CaCO3 is the sum of the atomic weights Ca + C + O3 = 40 + 12 + (16 x 3) = 100 so the weight of calcium = 40/100ths of the weight of calcium carbonate But it does at least confirm that here in East Anglia, we have "Very Hard" water. Yes Hence the prevalence of water softeners. |
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