Warm Grit?
Author
Discussion

parapaul

Original Poster:

2,828 posts

219 months

Tuesday 7th December 2010
quotequote all
As I drove to work tonight I passed the council depot where the gritters were just leaving to start their rounds. One of them, which looked no different to all the others, was puffing like a steam train. I really don't think it was just excessive exhaust, the quantity of steam was unbelieveable!

Anyway, it got me thinking.

I have a vaugue recollection that grit is only really effective within a certain temperature range, and I wondered if this particular truck was somehow warming the grit, to allow it to melt through to the tarmac and do its thing?

Or am I just being thick? biggrin

cahami

1,248 posts

227 months

Tuesday 7th December 2010
quotequote all
HGF?

EDLT

15,421 posts

227 months

Tuesday 7th December 2010
quotequote all
Road salt is collected from discarded chips by seagulls, who dump the chips directly into the truck (which shreds them before spraying it everywhere). All thats happened is the council have hired efficient seagulls who quickly collected warm chips from nearby, probably casualties of a drunk fight.

parapaul

Original Poster:

2,828 posts

219 months

Tuesday 7th December 2010
quotequote all
EDLT said:
Road salt is collected from discarded chips by seagulls, who dump the chips directly into the truck (which shreds them before spraying it everywhere). All thats happened is the council have hired efficient seagulls who quickly collected warm chips from nearby, probably casualties of a drunk fight.
thumbup

Dilligaf10

2,431 posts

231 months

Tuesday 7th December 2010
quotequote all
EDLT said:
Road salt is collected from discarded chips by seagulls, who dump the chips directly into the truck (which shreds them before spraying it everywhere). All thats happened is the council have hired efficient seagulls who quickly collected warm chips from nearby, probably casualties of a drunk fight.
I'm sorry but that has come from a seriously f*cked up brain!! smile

slomax

7,170 posts

213 months

Tuesday 7th December 2010
quotequote all
I do not know, but I recall on the news that they have modified a load if trucks with massive water tanks and they mix it together with the salt so they actually spray brine on the road. This gives more coverage and actually gets to work quicker. Maybe they heat the water so that the salt can dissolve in the water much easier and quicker.

CraigyMc

18,078 posts

257 months

Tuesday 7th December 2010
quotequote all
slomax said:
I do not know, but I recall on the news that they have modified a load if trucks with massive water tanks and they mix it together with the salt so they actually spray brine on the road. This gives more coverage and actually gets to work quicker. Maybe they heat the water so that the salt can dissolve in the water much easier and quicker.
It'll be hilarious the firrst time they run out of salt before water.

Oh look, there goes the grittingicing lorry............