My daughter was in India 7yrs ago. On a mission trip to help build - an outhouse. One concrete bunker add on for a family that needed it. Pit type, no seat, and only water to clean up.
This was a good movie, and gave some insight into that issue, and other poverty and toilet-related issues in India:
en.wikipedia.org
I'd like to know more about this if you have a reference or just additional info.
My recall is sketchy and probably based on some PBS TV show (maybe NOVA) some years ago.
If you'd rather not diverge here a PM would be great.
Got a project due for work this weekend, so I'll get back to you on this, after I've had a chance to review. But I believe you were substituting multistage rocket theory, which was already well-proven and being used by the Russians (in both parallel and sequential forms) in the 1960's, with the concept of space rendezvous as a plan for getting to the moon. This rendezvous concept was indeed challenged for some time, and there became three separate camps of thought, as to the best plan for a moon shot.
On the multistage rocket concept, Russians started with a really cool multistage plan in the 1950's, where all stages would initially fire in parallel (hence the name, "parallel multistage"), but stages would drop off as they progressed away from the earth. This was very efficient, but also more complicated and prone to fail. They eventually dropped back to the simpler sequential multistage with which we're all familiar, which we also used in the US.
Thread Derail, RE Baby Wipes and other wet wipes, in case others do not know, are a major issue with septic systems and plumbing in general. Within a few years I expect every house is going to end up with a macerator system required on the sewer outlet.
Before reading this thread, I would have never even considered that anyone would flush those things down a toilet! We went thru the baby wipes years (with babies... not the adults), starting in a house with public sewer and then moving to a house with septic, but in both cases we threw those things into a lidded trash can! The lid was mostly about keeping the dog out of them.
Depends on the city. Out local Plants debris catchment system handle these along with all the other debris and landfills it. Some cities cant seem to so anything right including potable water that safe for the public. Wipes are not going away so they had better learn how to deal with them. Its not rocket science.
True, but keep in mind the mentions above of Philadelphia and London, two of the oldest sewer systems in the world, and each of which handle more sewage per day than any smaller borough does in three or four months! Both likely have many aged or antique components spanning ~150 sq.mi. each, serving easily 10 million people per day (6-8 million residents + commuters), both systems being over 200 years old. Most of the largest towns in your "eastern central PA" are literally only 1/100th the population of these two massive old cities, and most haven't had sewer systems more than 60 years!
Off topic: Remember the Fat Berg in the London sewer a few years ago. Major yuk!
Yep. For anyone who missed it:
https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo...rg-london-s-130-ton-rock-solid-sewer-blockage
...we all need to show some form of restraint to reduce chaos within the hospital.
One of the key points of many of the interviews I've seen, including (if I recall) the Rogan interview begreen posted two pages back, is that this is the primary concern and motive behind event closings. Simply put, most of us are going to get this thing, and most of us will do fine with it. Many may have already had it, and not even realized it was anything other than a regular cold or flu. But for those who suffer more acutely from it and require hospital care, they are trying to avoid the same scenario we've all seen in Italy over the past ten days, in which so many people were infected so quickly that the hospitals are unable to handle the load. By closing schools and events, they are not under any assumption this will stop the spread, they are only trying to slow it to a rate at which our healthcare system is not loaded to the breaking point.
Trump of course has other motives, protecting the economy. Simply put, his re-election hinges on this one the economy doing well going into November. It almost appears that he hoped that by pretending corona was not an issue, it might go away. I guess for those who have lived thru the last dozen forecast "pandemics" that turned out to be non-events, with regard to the economy on a 6-month time scale, it was a calculated risk. Once the market tanked as a reaction to what was happening, it forced his hand toward a reaction. The rally on Friday, which I believe is an all-time record, was soothing for anyone who lost big money on Thursday. But I'm sure there's plenty of volatility in our near future, hang on to your hat.
So why are they double gloving and double gowning which are both directly against CDC recommendations. This is droplet protections. The requirements for that are only a mask on the pt if they tolerate it then gown and gloves. The provider may wear a mask but, until it is aerosolized through high flow oxygen or intubation there is no need for a hepa mask.
I heard the same from one doctor, who prior to the interview was being touted as an expert of some kind in this field. But then I heard conflicting statements from two others, all within the same week. So those of us not in the industry, and apparently many who ARE in the industry, are left wondering. Was one doc apparently wrong, and the others right, or is this just an issue of timing and new observations?
We've been using the biodegradable type at our house on septic for 20 years without issue. I've watched the septic tank be pumped twice and the tech never mentioned any issues with wipes. It was clear from the content that whatever we were flushing was breaking down.
...or they floated downstream into your field or mound, where they'll ruin your day sometime in the future? I dunno, just thinking out load.