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Ruptured gas cylinder safety warning - photo
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That would make a perfect ashtray for a welding shop!
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The Trades school I attended, when I was a young apprentice, had a similar display of a G size oxygen cylinder from a work shop that had been burnt out in the Ash Wednesday bushfires of 1983 in Victoria Australia.
It had ruptured with such force it was nearly flat, looking at it from the front it looked like a bat standing upright with its wings out stretched.
Things such as gas cylinders plus other materials and equipment have the potential to be very dangerous yet myself and millions of others are using them in their daily lives without a second thought, I always remember the words of one of my trade teachers “A lot of people are killed by complacency.”
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The scrapyard I go to had one sneak through and go in their crusher. The sign says that when it exploded you could hear it a mile away. I'll try to grab a picture the next time I'm there.
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Attachment 41566 Breathing Apparatus cylinders involved in a fire at work, I have photo's of others split as above as well, the Dissolved Acetylene 'portapak' mini cylinder that detonated could only be identified by the neck collar, found 150 Metres away.
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I lost a leg after I was injured fighting a fire that threatened to rupture a dozen one-pound bottles of propane sitting on the passenger seat of a pickup truck, right next to a two gallon jug of kerosene, with a contractor-sized box of roofing nails on top. Basically it was like the driver had built himself a bomb without even thinking about it, and he was mortified that it happened. He didn't mean any harm. He was just buying supplies for his fishing cabin and the engine in his thirty year old pickup caught fire. One thing led to another but it never went boom. And it would have been a drag if it had, because this happened on the street in front of a nursing home.
Ruptured gas bottles will make a complete mess of you. Even the little ones. And this one was not a little one. I always cringe when I see people in action films using them like mortars, pounding the valve off the top as though that would just send it flying. We even had a group of kids at camp one year, with a group of idiot adult leaders paying no attention at all, build a campfire up to enormous size, burning a half cord of firewood at one time and probably well above forging temperatures, decide to toss a propane bottle into the fire and wait and see.
We sent them home. The release valve worked and the bottle didn't rupture but I had to evacuate the kids from the campsite. That was a bad night for those suburban nitwit leaders. They were a bunch of Wall Street types who instantly tried buying their way out of culpability. They were never allowed back to that camp.
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Here in the UK certain 'mobile thieving b'stard stolen caravan dwelling do as they likeys' regularly leave 15 Kg cylinders in caravans they've replaced with a newer stolen model in the hope of it exploding to totally destroy any DNA evidence, intact cylinder recovered by Fire & Rescue': Attachment 41574
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Quote:
Originally Posted by
Elizabeth Greene
The scrapyard I go to had one sneak through and go in their crusher. The sign says that when it exploded you could hear it a mile away. I'll try to grab a picture the next time I'm there.
It took a bit, but I finally got back up there.
Attachment 42027
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Exactly why I drill holes in 'empty' single use gas cylinder/bottle if I can't remove the valve assembly, only after purging and being filled with water, as our scrap collector won't take them if intact. Some US made single use cylinders are useful for other things, gong targets is one, if the bottoms been cut off.
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I'll remember that. I could use some gong targets.