Verschmutzt auch ein Tropfen Öl für die Fahrradkette 1000 Liter Trinkwasser?
“Man sagt aber, dass ein Tropfen Öl ca. 600-1000 Liter Wasser verunreinigen kann.”
Was ist wenn man mit einem Lappen den Boden gewischt hat wo das Fahrrad (das war schwarz auf dem Boden) gewaschen wurde und dann mit dem Lappen drinnen den Boden geputzt hat. Ich hab gelesen, das ist auch krebserregend und so.
Sure he does. Petroleum is petroleum.
Since most bicycle-chain oils, unless otherwise stated, are oil-based, the water-contaminating property of course also applies for this. Petroleum is petroleum.
Biologically degradable chain oils, for example from F100, have now reached a high level in all the criteria relevant to chain oils according to tests:
https://www.rosebikes.de/f100-bio-chainoel-2695625?article_size=6406&product_shape=1
But the converted liter price of 119,50, Aua!
That’s right. The water is ecstatic. I therefore cannot understand the people who always cook their tea with the splashing water. Let them take the wash water. Much healthier.
I don’t understand. Please explain more what information you want to give.
That was ironic. Felix routinely tilts 15W40 cheap KFZ engine oil to its chains and does not like it especially about environmental friendliness or – Incompatibility of the same in the environment to make great thoughts.
It indicates that the bicycle shops call for utopian literary prices for their chain oil mini-pumps (which are also available in biodegradable variants).
What he’s not wrong with.
The oil from the floor lands in the waste water, not in the drinking water. Sewage lines lead it to the next sewage treatment plant. There it is degraded by bacteria. So it can’t get you dangerous.
If you produce larger quantities of oil, you need a special oil separator. It is not possible to introduce unlimited oil into the wastewater system. It’s forbidden. The oil is then neutralized or burned, I don’t know exactly. It also does not come into your drinking water.
All life is carcinogenic. The oil from the splashing water does not contribute to this. It is first neutralized by your detergent. Then it lands in the waste water. The scrub for the floor is always rinsed out. If you’re good, you go twice over the ground. A second time with clear water, with the lobes getting out to get as much dirt as possible from the ground.
Yeah, most of the young people can’t get up today. Apparently, they don’t get taught as I found in my WG.
Aha
Don’t put everything on the gold scale
I don’t get any oil on it. With a funnel, I fill the oil in the small bottles and move it very sparingly. I’ve got a liter bottle of five years down. For the WD-40 I even have a drop dispenser and for Ballistol I have a small bristle brush. Sometimes I throw away an old oily lobe. That’s all. He lands in the waste incineration. Oily areas that I have to clean up do not come from me either. Bicycles I work on are hanging in the mounting stand above my so-called oil carpet, the same old runner for 20 years.
Prima bacteria that quickly degrade all oil 🙂