marked141 wrote:
If you don't know what your doing or how to handle different materials, anything can be dangerous.
The leaded glass isn't really all that dangerous from what I understand because the lead doesn't leach out of the glass like it might from a pewter plate. But...older models without implosion protection could hurt you from sharp flying glass. Older models without a bleed on the flyback tranformers would be the ones to worry about an electrical discharge. Then the phosphorus in the screen if you decided to pick up a broken monitor, get cuts on your hands and then touch all the phosphorus. Shouldn't breath too much of that either ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
But the topic is LCDs...which can be bad too, don't want to get a cut with a broken edge of one if those.
Implosion protection is not a thing in CRTs of any age TBH sure some of better but they all go poof/pop when they crack. bleed restorer on the flyback is not needed TBH, just pull the power plug on the tv and wait a few minutes as is common since when pulling apart anything electronic, As for the phosphorus, that stuff is used in fireworks and few other things... why is phosphorus bad in a CRT but ok to breath in from fireworks... or oooor in our pee/bones and many of the foods we eat?
Folks over complicate safety all to much, I could sworn the last set of warning labels we got at work came in the package with its own warning label on it.
But the edges and the aluminum foil in LCDs, that stuff, keep it away from me, it cuts me finngys all up.