Microfiber fell on cement. Can I still use them?

if you drop a towel on a clean driveway..

Pick it up, inspect it thoroughly with your eyes and hands, wash as normal and re-inspect after drying

anything that is on the surface if your driveway is likely on the surface of your paint

thank you
 
Im with allenk4 -
Unless you dropped it in a bag of cement, etc., I would inspect it, wash it, re-inspect it and you should be good to go..

Because you always inspect each towel you are using anyway - before - and during its use - every time, you should be fine..
Dan F
 
I only worked as an electrician on hot plants so I do not know or care about the recipes but I can tell you

they were using lime at one time but they are back to using cement for the additive.

I believe both are/were being used for the clay in the agg/sand.

Dave
This is the "type of cementitious cement" that went into the recipe towards making the concrete driveways...
where ever I've resided.



I can tell you that the main ingredient needed for this type of cement manufacturing is CaO (slaked lime) which is produced from the mineral calcite (CaCO3) in limestone.

I also don't care about the exact % of the secondary ingredients that goes into this particular type of cement's recipe...But I can tell you that the final ratio of silica to alumina, plus iron oxide, must be tightly controlled.


Bob
 
This is the "type of cementitious cement" that went into the recipe towards making the concrete driveways...
where ever I've resided.



I can tell you that the main ingredient needed for this type of cement manufacturing is CaO (slaked lime) which is produced from the mineral calcite (CaCO3) in limestone.

I also don't care about the exact % of the secondary ingredients that goes into this particular type of cement's recipe...But I can tell you that the final ratio of silica to alumina, plus iron oxide, must be tightly controlled.


Bob

Ha!!!!, That was the last mining/hot/plant/concrete batch plant company I worked for. That was after they bought out Rinker which was United metro before that. Word has it that Vulcan is trading some batch plants for Cemex's Hot plants. Cemex never really wanted anything to do with Hot plants, they just came with the Rinker package.

Dave
 
I've done it a few times in my detailing life. I just toss them. Not worth it to me over $4-5-6-7...
 
That's reasonable. I'd probably toss them, like a dropped clay patty. I only reused the coating towels because I forgot about them, did towel laundry, and now can't tell the difference if any...
 
Ha!!!!, That was the last mining/hot/plant/concrete batch plant company I worked for. That was after they bought out Rinker which was United metro before that. Word has it that Vulcan is trading some batch plants for Cemex's Hot plants. Cemex never really wanted anything to do with Hot plants, they just came with the Rinker package.

Dave
Moraine (noun):
1.) a ridge, mound, or irregular mass of unstratified glacial drift, chiefly boulders, gravel, sand, and clay.
2.) a deposit of such material left on the ground by a glacier.
__________________________________________________

Nearby me is the city of Moraine, Ohio.
Built on top of a "gravel pit".

As can be expected:
There are several aggregate, and "Ready Mix" operations within a few miles radius.
They work in conjunction with a Southwestern Portland Cement plant which became Southdown, Inc...which then became Industrial Trading, Inc.: now known as CEMEX, Inc.

It is a small World, after all. :)


Bob
 
George Harrison but you're forgiven...

No, it was George Harrison - John Lennon would have never written that song..
Dan F

Yep.... bit of an ol' Brain FART there! :dig::awman::dig:

And I've GOT the album (vinyl actually). :rolleyes:

Interesting facts about the song.

"In 1976, Bright Tunes Music sued Harrison because this sounded too much like the 1963 Chiffons hit "He's So Fine." Bright Tunes was controlled by The Tokens, who set it up when they formed the production company that recorded "He's So Fine" - they owned the publishing rights to the song.

During the convoluted court case, Harrison explained how he composed the song: He said that In December, 1969, he was playing a show in Copenhagen, Denmark, with the group Delaney and Bonnie, whose piano player was Billy Preston (who contributed to some Beatles recordings). Harrison said that he started writing the song after a press conference when he slipped away and started playing some guitar chords around the words "Hallelujah" and "Hare Krishna." He then brought the song to the band, who helped him work it out as he came up with lyrics. When he returned to London, Harrison worked on Billy Preston's album Encouraging Words. They recorded the song for the album, which was released on Apple Records later in 1970, and Harrison filed a copyright application for the melody, words and harmony of the song. Preston's version remained an album cut, and it was Harrison's single that was the huge hit and provoked the lawsuit, which was filed on February 10, 1971, while the song was still on the chart.

In further testimony, Harrison claimed he got the idea for "My Sweet Lord" from The Edwin Hawkins Singers' "
Oh Happy Day," not "He's So Fine."

When the case was filed, Harrison's manager was Allen Klein, who negotiated with Bright Tunes on his behalf. The case was delayed when Bright Tunes went into receivership, and was not heard until 1976. In the meantime, Harrison and Klein parted ways in bitter fashion, and Klein began consulting Bright Tunes. Harrison offered to settle the case for $148,000 in January, 1976, but the offer was rejected and the case brought to court.

The trial took place February 23-25, with various expert witnesses testifying. The key to the case was the musical pattern of the two songs, which were both based on two musical motifs: "G-E-D" and "G-A-C-A-C." "He's So Fine" repeated both motifs four times, "My Sweet Lord" repeated the first motif four times and the second motif three times. Harrison couldn't identify any other songs that used this exact pattern, and the court ruled that "the two songs are virtually identical." And while the judge felt that Harrison did not intentionally copy "My Sweet Lord," that was not a defense - thus Harrison was on the hook writing a similar song without knowing it.

Assessing damages in the case, the judge determined that "My Sweet Lord" represented 70% of the airplay of the All Things Must Pass album, and came up with a total award of about $1.6 million. However, in 1978 Allen Klein's company ABKCO purchased Bright Tunes for $587,000, which prompted Harrison to sue. In 1981, a judge decided that Klein should not profit from the judgment, and was entitled to only the $587,000 he paid for the company - all further proceeds from the case had to be remitted back to Harrison. The case dragged on until at least 1993, when various administrative matters were finally settled.

The case was a burden for Harrison, who says he tried to settle but kept getting dragged back to court by Bright Tunes. After losing the lawsuit, he became more disenfranchised with the music industry, and took some time off from recording - after his 1976 album Thirty Three & 1/3, he didn't release another until his self-titled album in 1979. He told Rolling Stone, "It's difficult to just start writing again after you've been through that. Even now when I put the radio on, every tune I hear sounds like something else."




For the full page go here.
My Sweet Lord by George Harrison Songfacts
 
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