How dangerous is this? Massive mercury battery leakage in Pulsar

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I opened this up a few months ago without knowing what was behind the cover and when I did this powder was everywhere. It wasn't until after that I knew I was dealing with mercury batteries. I vacuumed my workspace thoroughly and used a q tip with vinegar to soak up most of the powder. How dangerous is this?

 
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Very dangerous for the watch, probably fatal. Much less so for you if you were sensible and washed your hands after handling.
Edited:
 
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Kids my age (mid 60's) fought to get hold of mercury: sparkly silver "liquid", well who wouldn't? Physics/chemistry lessons and science teachers would happily enable such experiences back before "RISK ASSESSMENT" became part of our language.
Mercury is like other naturally occurring substances: ultimately eating it by the cupful isn't recommended.

I think you'll be fine. Expect to live a long life which will not end because back in 2022 you were in the same room as a teensy amount of mercury. Come and live in England where somebody is trying to ban lead from everyday life: think that one through.
 
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In your case I do not think it is to dangerous..when I was a child many years ago I broke several thermometers to take the mercury out of them. back in those days the thermometers were made with mercury. We get about 100g and play with it a few days until our parents find out..nothing happen.
 
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Absolutely mesmerizing Calder mercury fountain at the Miró Museum in Barcelona.

I think I stood and watched it for ten or fifteen minutes when we visited (the rest of the museum is amazing too).

 
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Kids my age (mid 60's) fought to get hold of mercury: sparkly silver "liquid", well who wouldn't? Physics/chemistry lessons and science teachers would happily enable such experiences back before "RISK ASSESSMENT" became part of our language.

The origin of "quicksilver"...
 
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I have a goodly quantity of mercury in my garage in a carburettor balancer. Should I hand myself in to the police?

Rather more dangerously I have a number of emergency signal flares that are seriously out of date. If my garage ever has a big fire the magnesium foil in them is going to make a serious conflagration. In theory they can be handed in to the the fire service but the local bods knew nothing about it when I asked 😡
 
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I used to have a mercury based system to balance a 4 carburetor setup on my motorcycle. The mercury was shipped in a separate vial which was poured into the small reservoir on the Carb Stix. But that was before we got to the point where almost everything sold in California has a warning label on it telling you it's a dangerous product for one reason or another.
 
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MRC MRC
I have a goodly quantity of mercury in my garage in a carburettor balancer. Should I hand myself in to the police?

Rather more dangerously I have a number of emergency signal flares that are seriously out of date. If my garage ever has a big fire the magnesium foil in them is going to make a serious conflagration. In theory they can be handed in to the the fire service but the local bods knew nothing about it when I asked 😡

Might this fall under the heading of "Never, ever volunteer for anything which you might later regret."? Let's face it, the reason you don't want them is a very good reason for them not to have to want them.
 
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Might this fall under the heading of "Never, ever volunteer for anything which you might later regret."? Let's face it, the reason you don't want them is a very good reason for them not to have to want them.
These came with a 33' (10 metre) s/h sailboat in which I had a share after we bought it. Already just outdated, so because we were going racing on the North Sea we needed to replace them all for the regulations, and common sense. So, what to do with some of the old ones? We waited until November 5th (bonfire night in the UK), walked out a mile or so into fields and found out what it was like to like to hold an ignited rescue flare. Do not hold it upright, point it down or your hand will be covered in molten plastic.... We let off a parachute flare and from the height it reached reckoned it could have easily been seen by the nearby USAF base at Mildenhall, probably Lakenheath too. It lit the countryside red for miles around 😎
 
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I'd rather deal with lead than mercury. (actually some plants will not grow without lead in the soil.) I hate it when the two metals are confused for political gain.

Mercury can be bad. The room temperature stuff is not to harmful. Where it gets bad is when it is vaporized. This is where it gets ingested. The result is that it gets into your brain and plates it causing short circuits. The right amount and well, that was the euphoria the Alchemist were looking for. Too much though and one becomes mad as a hatter.

Mercury also has an affinity for gold. This is the easiest way to refine gold. Coincidentally California has both large quantities of Mercury as well as gold. The former is fount in the SF bay area in the red earth called cinnabar. Back in the 1950s and 1960s this was sold as landscaping material.

The issues happen in the separation process. The mercury gold amalgam is burned in the fireplace. cyanide is used in the bleaching process. The old watchmaking trade journals have a lot of articles on this. The process is known as water gilding and it is really efficient. Back in the day the poorer folk would live upstairs. So the poor would suffer from the effects. It is said that to this day at the inversion level in the Swiss valleys there is a bathtub ring of mercury contamination. Who knows what the effects in the amazon rain forest are.

Some of the bi products of waterguilding are also neural toxins. Can kill instantly. The other use and why mercury is banned in most places in one of the byproducts is used for blasting caps and shell primers. (according to the trade journal.)

The white stuff though may be zinc oxide, which is currently used in sunscreen and make-up. Some batteries what are rechargeable use lead, but these are heavier. Lead oxide, which can also be purple or green, is known as sugar of lead. For most of history this was used to sweeten foods. Lead is naturally sweet, which is why children and animals eat it. Again the effects are synonymous with poverty. The reason for the bans have to do with lost lawsuits, primarily the Sherwin Williams company, which had huge payouts.

As with all things moderation is the critical factor. I once heard that Europeans tend to identify with the larger side of statistics (like winning at a game of chance.) ie one has a 90 percent chance of winning something. American identify with the small side as in we thing we have 10 percent chance of winning something. This is well know in marketing. If you can not win a lottery your odds are better with litigation.

No one ever died from lead in consumer electronics.

-j
 
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The issues happen in the separation process. The mercury gold amalgam is burned in the fireplace. cyanide is used in the bleaching process. The old watchmaking trade journals have a lot of articles on this. The process is known as water gilding and it is really efficient. Back in the day the poorer folk would live upstairs. So the poor would suffer from the effects. It is said that to this day at the inversion level in the Swiss valleys there is a bathtub ring of mercury contamination. Who knows what the effects in the amazon rain forest are.

Some of the bi products of waterguilding are also neural toxins. Can kill instantly. The other use and why mercury is banned in most places in one of the byproducts is used for blasting caps and shell primers. (according to the trade journal.)

I remember an episode of Pawn Stars with one of those old timey mantel clocks with the ornate gilded decorations. It was described to the customers as the "death clock", but no explanation was really given. Needless to say, with a name like that, the customers immediately looked elsewhere.
 
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.

For most of history this was used to sweeten foods. Lead is naturally sweet, which is why children and animals eat it.

-j
Thank you, you’ve just explained why the squirrels eat the lead on my shed roof, something that’s been confusing me for a long time!
 
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Could be wrong here, but mercury / cadmium oxides that one would expect inside a button cell tend to have very strong colours - I'd say those white crystals were potassium carbonate from the electrolyte. I think the mercury it is either too thick to seep out of the gap in the battery seal, the electrolyte crystals have re-sealed the batteries, or it had already vaporised...😵‍💫

Best to wear one of these bad boys next time you handle mercury (do take plenty of selfies for the purpose of our education).
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