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Topband: PCB Inspection Warning!

To: topband@contesting.com
Subject: Topband: PCB Inspection Warning!
From: "Donald Chester" <k4kyv@hotmail.com>
Date: Thu, 08 Jul 2004 18:05:28 +0000
List-post: <mailto:topband@contesting.com>
I received a telephone call this morning from a lady who told me she was doing a followup to a PCB inspection at the radio station that gave me the Gates BC1-T broadcast transmitter about a year ago. She explained that the station personnel gave her my name as the person receiving the transmitter, and that she is required to follow up to keep track of where the PCB had gone.

She asked me a few questions about the transmitter, and I told her that I had put it to use after converting it to the 160m ham band, and assured her that I had worked with this type of equipment for many years and that I was aware of the PCB situation and the requirement that any PCB components be disposed of properly. I also explained that there were many items on the transmitter, such as tar-filled transformers and electrolytic capacitors that had been mislabeled as "PCB devices". I explained that the only actual PCB devices in the transmitter were the HV power supply capacitors and that none of the transformers contained PCB. She seemed satisfied at my response.

She asked me if the parts that were mislabelled "PCB" had been tested or otherwise how did I know they did not contain PCB. She seemed satisfied with my response that I was familiar with the nameplates and part #'s on the components (such as the UTC CG series filter choke).

She told me she was going to write in ther report that the only PCB components involved in this case are "small capacitors" which, evidently, are exempt from stringent regulations covering "large capacitors".

The lady was very cordial and pleasant to talk with. Hopefully this will be the last I hear on the topic. I have LOADS of PCB capacitors in my 40+ years parts collection.

I thought it might be wise to pass this along since other members of this board may have acquired transmitters or transmitter parts from broadcast stations and may eventually be contacted in a similar inquiry. Evidently all commercial users of anything with PCB must account for every item they dispose of. To avoid further hassle, it might be a good idea to have your story already prepared and anything of significance documented in such a way as to satisfy any inquisitors. This is especially true if anything in the transmitter has one of the yellow "PCB" decals attached. This means that it is on record somewhere that the unit contains PCB. I would suggest assuring anyone making an inquiry that all capacitors are in the "small" category, still in use it the transmitter, and that you know how to properly dispose of them, or at least you know not to throw them in the dump.

In order not to cause the source of retired transmitters to dry up, we need to bend over backwards to satisfy the PCB inquisitors. All it would take would be one or two cases of station management being hassled about giving away PCP-laden stuff that was later improperly disposed of, for the story to circulate throughout the industry, resulting in a standard corporate policy not to release abandoned transmitters to private individuals. The person who talks to you may not be as cordial as the lady who called me.

I recall a ham out west telling me several years ago that a station manager refused to let him have a 1 kw transmitter with a quad of 833A's because he was so paranoid about liability over PCB. When the ham offered to remove all the likely PCB components and leave them on-site for proper disposal, the manager still refused, apparently believing that the mere presence of one PCB capacitor somehow contaminated everything inside the box, and that he might eventually be held liable even for releasing the 833A's! So the station paid top dollar to some hazardous waste disposal company to move an entire 1500+ lb. tranasmitter to a special site for "proper" disposal.

Don, k4kyv

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