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Very often these scares are fake, dreamed up by some get rich quick skeem to dispose of old light bulbs that contain micro small amounts of less mercury than are found in the fish we eat.
For the past 15 years people have been getting rich from the FAKE global warming scare. Before that it was the fake, el Nino Scare. Before that is was lead paint scare and the asbestos scare.
The real problem is, no one can be trusted. People will lie to make $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$.
don't be the fool that panics
I know where you are coming from. When I was still in Highschool I rebuilt and ran a wave solder machine for the company I worked for after school. the bus would drop me off there. It was in a trailer with one blower, on nice days we could open the doors. Any guess as to what we used to get the flux of the boards?4pyros,where I retired from they made car wiring and electrical parts. The lines that made the individual wires that go into a harness had 'solder pots', like a slow cooker full of melted solder, that the stripped wire ends were dipped in before the terminals were crimped on them. The only safety related thing required was a furnace pipe going up to a blower in the ceiling, that blew the fumes out in the whole shop. This was required by OSHA, before OSHA there was no pipe.
They melted and injection molded battery cable ends onto the cables too. That required the blower to vent out the roof.
With old solder/leaded joints the bigger problem is the oxides on the lead. The white powdery stuff.
Lead production started 3000 years ago. The Romans used it in plumbing (plumbum, Latin) also as a additive to wine. It did not help the Romans think clearly.
Only one thing I'd like to mention. I am pretty sure that they didn't use it as an additive.
You might want to read this, https://penelope.uchicago.edu/~grout/encyclopaedia_romana/wine/leadpoisoning.html
From that, "Certainly, the Romans knew lead to be dangerous, even if they did not associate it with their lead cooking vessels. Pliny speaks of the "noxious and deadly vapour" (sulfur dioxide) of the lead furnace (XXXIV.167; there was a four-fold increase in atmospheric Pb pollution during the Greco-Roman period); white lead (cerussa) as a deadly poison (XXXIV.176), even though it was widely used as a medicine and cosmetic; and the power of sapa (and onion) to induce an abortion (XXIII.30). Dioscorides cautions against taking white lead internally, as it is deadly (Material Medica, V.103). Soranus in his Gynecology (I.19.61) recommends that the mouth of the uterus be smeared with white lead to prevent conception. Galen (De Antidotis, XIV.144) and Celsus (V.27.12b) both provide an antidote for poisoning by white lead, and Vitruvius remarks on the pernicious effects of water found near lead mines and its effect on the body (VIII.3.5, 6.11)."
Even in 'modern times' we didn't mind lead too much. Until they started making plastic toothpaste tubes, they were made of lead. "The original collapsible toothpaste tubes were made of lead", from https://www.google.com/search?q=lead+in+tooth+paste+tubes&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8 I can remember those from the 1950's early 1960's, cutting them up for fishing sinkers.
trichlorotrifluoroethane solvent: 1.1.1 Real nasty stuff.Sulphuric Acid? I'd like to know