beauanderos wrote:Charlie Riser (retired Fresno Fire Capt) had a business recycling the silver from xrays. Don't know how lucrative it was, but I guess it paid well enough to hire a few off duty firemen, one of them being John Hodges (I think that was his name, this was years ago). Both of them died early deaths due to cancer, along with another employee.
Thogey wrote:In 197? someone gave me a huge spool of silver nitrate (movie)film. I knew it had value for the silver, but I was a kid.
You can make awesome smoke bombs with silver nitrate film, electrical tape and a firecracker. I demonstratated how to do this to my hoodlem friends. I managed to sell and trade the film for various barter items, including a big bull snake.
The snake escaped within 24 hours and wound up in one of my dad's bird cages. I denied the whole thing.
Thogey wrote:In 197? someone gave me a huge spool of silver nitrate (movie)film. I knew it had value for the silver, but I was a kid.
You can make awesome smoke bombs with silver nitrate film, electrical tape and a firecracker. I demonstratated how to do this to my hoodlem friends. I managed to sell and trade the film for various barter items, including a big bull snake.
The snake escaped within 24 hours and wound up in one of my dad's bird cages. I denied the whole thing.
68Camaro wrote:beauanderos wrote:Charlie Riser (retired Fresno Fire Capt) had a business recycling the silver from xrays. Don't know how lucrative it was, but I guess it paid well enough to hire a few off duty firemen, one of them being John Hodges (I think that was his name, this was years ago). Both of them died early deaths due to cancer, along with another employee.
Lovely. Wonder if was from firefighting related stuff, or if they were messing around with bad chemicals during the recycling process?
beauanderos wrote:68Camaro wrote:beauanderos wrote:Charlie Riser (retired Fresno Fire Capt) had a business recycling the silver from xrays. Don't know how lucrative it was, but I guess it paid well enough to hire a few off duty firemen, one of them being John Hodges (I think that was his name, this was years ago). Both of them died early deaths due to cancer, along with another employee.
Lovely. Wonder if was from firefighting related stuff, or if they were messing around with bad chemicals during the recycling process?
Could have been either or both. Methinks it was the chemicals they were dealing with... but back in the day (1974) when I first became a firefighter... the oldtimers would mock any rookie who wanted to don a SCBA tank and mask to go into a burning building, and God forbid you would keep one on during overhaul when the fire had been knocked down. Those guys would stand there, faces soot-stained and sweat pouring from beneath their helmets, leaving tracks coursing down their face, and laugh at us "stoopid rookies" as they smoked their stogies or chain smoked Marlboro's, one hand on a shovel or pitchfork, as smoke continued to billow from beneath mattresses with beams fallen across them, steam rising so that we were all enbillowed in clouds as if on a particularly foggy day. More than a few, I recall, died on the job, or lasted less than six months into retirement. Surprisingly, three or four committed suicide within a year or two of retiring. Two while on the job.
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