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Mercury Barometer

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Peyroulou | 15:31 Wed 18th Oct 2006 | How it Works
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I have a mercury barometer that has air bubbles in the mercury column. Does anyone have any idea how to get them out (without poisoning myself)?
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I wouldn't bother trying to fix it. Just be careful. Remember, it's actually the vapour given off by mercury that will send you mental. Also, don't use any aluminium tools or anything aluminium near it. Mercury is a bioaccumulative toxicant that 's easily absorbed through the skin, respiratory and gastrointestinal tissues.
I use a mercury thermometers at work and had the same problem with bubbles in the mercury column - the way in which I got it fixed was to freeze it down to a temperature where all the mercury "shrinks" back inside the bulb at the base - don't know if it wold work on a barometer though.
Heat it slowly so that the hot air rises to the surface.

Best not use the Microwave on this one lol
Please be careful subjecting a thermometer to heat ! Overdo it and it will, without warning, explode like a high velocity misile. Shards of glass and mercury at the speed of sound, or is it above? - anway not recomended.
Just felt I should add that two pe'orth for anyone just in case.
Question Author
Thank you for the suggestions, I should have mentioned that the barometer is of the 'stick' kind, around 250 years old and about 3' long...
Big microwave ;-)
I wondered if turning it upside down would work. Any ideas?
Don't turn it upside down you could lose all the mercury. with thermometers you can swing them round sharply. Don't know if it will work with a barometer though.
Question Author
Ivor, thanks for the suggestion. Not sure if I have the courage to try that on such an old instrument...
Try contacting barometer world at www.barometerworld.co.uk. have found them very helpful in the past ivor II
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Many thanks, will do tomorrow.

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