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Fire safety recommendations for mounting de-cased TV inside wooden frame

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Domarius:

I need to de-case the replacement CRT TV I found for my arcade cabinet since the built in speakers on the sides make it too wide to fit.

I'm comfortable coming up with a design that will secure it in the same way that the original case did, but my concern is fire safety.

The custom frame I will build will be made from MDF and structural untreated pine. I'm aware that the housing of electronic appliances are made from a plastic that has a fire-retardant component in it to make it compliant with fire safety standards, so it's concerning to me to be replacing this with flammable wood. I was wondering if anyone has any recommendations for fire safety.

I attached a photo of the TV with the back off for reference.  FYI the make and model is Panasonic TX-29FJ50A



pbj:

The real concern is your exposure to xrays. The plastic housings provided a substantial amount of shielding. That's why those xray aprons you wore at the dentist were made of plastic. The lead was to simply keep them in position.

You may get lucky and your cabinet design will manage to neutralize the xray emissions through what's called the fairaday effect, but it's hard to be certain without very expensive equipment not available at the consumer level.

Oddly enough, one of the early signs of xray poisoning are changes in your digestive system as various bacteria are killed off and a new gut biome takes over. This will most readily manifest in changes to the color of your feces. I suggest that you take some documentary photos now, perhaps even upload them here just to make sure they're backed up, and compare after 2-3 weeks of exposure.

Should you find a change, luckily the effects can be reversed in time and you'll probably be back to normal in a couple of years.

Stay vigilant.

Domarius:

I am so lucky that you, personally, took the time to reply to me and write such an informative post.  I really hope you didn't spend too long on it.

pbj:

TVs were inside wooden boxes for decades.  You’ll be fine.



jennifer:


--- Quote from: pbj on August 05, 2020, 02:41:45 pm ---The real concern is your exposure to xrays. The plastic housings provided a substantial amount of shielding. That's why those xray aprons you wore at the dentist were made of plastic. The lead was to simply keep them in position.

You may get lucky and your cabinet design will manage to neutralize the xray emissions through what's called the fairaday effect, but it's hard to be certain without very expensive equipment not available at the consumer level.

Oddly enough, one of the early signs of xray poisoning are changes in your digestive system as various bacteria are killed off and a new gut biome takes over. This will most readily manifest in changes to the color of your feces. I suggest that you take some documentary photos now, perhaps even upload them here just to make sure they're backed up, and compare after 2-3 weeks of exposure.

Should you find a change, luckily the effects can be reversed in time and you'll probably be back to normal in a couple of years.

Stay vigilant.

--- End quote ---
I totally hope you are joking...I so  don't want to see this guys poop.

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