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this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2024
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todayilearned
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todayilearned
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I worked for a year at an asphalt plant (producing the road pavement stuff you drive on). The liquid asphalt, or "AC" as it's called, is stored at around 600-800F (IIRC) to stay liquid. When there is an AC leak, or you're doing maintenance on the wet elevator or silos, and you get AC on your clothing, the only way to remove it is with diesel fuel. There were many times I had to basically bathe in diesel fuel.
There is a "recycle crusher" that breaks down old asphalt grindings to add back into the mix in some recipes. That thing makes a lot of fine black dust from the crushing hammers. When it sticks to your skin it won't let go without diesel or rash inducing levels of scrubbing. The funny part is that you can't really scrub it off of one area; the eye line around your eyelashes. Every time we had to service the recycle crushing hammers, I looked like I was wearing eye liner for a week.
It was a rough job...
Diesel is the primary solvent for asphalt. In fact, the "cold mix" that gets made for patching potholes is just old hot mix asphalt that the loader operator soaks in diesel fuel and tosses with the loader bucket a few times. If you take anything from this, diesel can dissolve asphalt over the course of a few soakings in a day or few. Like you could make it all the way to dirt using very little effort from a pick axe to break up the loose taffy.
That's interesting, thank you.
Super interesting. You make me think back to The Chemical Workers Song about guys with jobs like you had. The song always gives me goose bumps.
When I was on an asphalt sealing crew, I used acetone to get the crap off me very night. Would that have worked for you?
It might with the small stuff. Acetone can penetrate your skin while diesel is more like a thin oil. Acetone is also much more expensive. There was a station setup at the plants just for containment of diesel and AC. It was like a small fuel pump at an old gas station with a giant tank. I actually worked for several different plants. The largest had a full one gas station pump but the rest were large tanks. The diesel was mostly when you had to work in the thick of it. The stuff sticks really well to rubber in the containment area with the hottest stuff. That would cake on your boots until they felt like bricks. There is a material inside a concrete half wall enclosure that prevents most spills from escaping that first containment zone. It is like stepping in hot sticky taffy that is everywhere inside kitty litter. Those globs are the main problem, but there are times where someone has to crawl around in that gunk. The only other time you'll get into the thick stuff is if a flight (large steel shelf like structure) inside the main drum comes loose and finds its way into the elevator (enormous square buckets on a the biggest double chain you've never seen that carry around half a pickup truck load of asphalt to the top of the silos). If the elevator gets taken out like that, someone has to go into that hot zone and remove the obstruction after it has barely cooled down to melt your boot soles levels. At those temps, the AC is getting close to taffy like consistency, is super sticky, but also has the aggregate mixed. If they let it cool longer, the mix in the elevator will set and it will take a week to dig the whole thing out. So it is highly desirable for someone to do the job as hot as possible, probably far too hot for any inspector's eyes to function properly while securing their job. I melted some boots too, but from replacing flights. I wasn't around when elevator jams happened, thankfully.
Holy shit this is incredible to read
I used to explore abandoned factories when I was younger. I always dreamed what the work was like.
Reminds me of the old school experiment where you dissolve a tooth in a glass of Coca-Cola.