That dude should have stopped at the overhead door........Several years ago the employee at a fire department supply company told me about an accident he witnessed involving a high pressure tank. The tank rolled off his work bench and broke the valve off when it hit the concrete floor. It went through his closed overhead door and then knocked the axel out from underneath an 18 wheeler trailer parked on his lot. I took my tank home and sold it a few days later.
I dropped a 2 liter coke bottle once and all of that stuff happened.And this tank has HALF the pressure ours hold:
Was that when you dropped a few Mintos in?I dropped a 2 liter coke bottle once and all of that stuff happened.
Then it knocked an axle out from under a tractor/trailer rig.
Nah, that time was much worse.Was that when you dropped a few Mintos in?
I would really guess it’s because it doesn’t happen very often. Super terrible for the nasty effects this has on this guy and his loved ones but I think this is a very rare event.Scary as hell for all of us that fill 4500 psi tanks. I am actually surprised we don't hear of this more often.
Good ole Myth Busters!I remember the Myth busters, wanting to make as Salami rocket, using NOS to get things / salami going.
They did not get salami ignition but the rocket still flew on the NOS alone.
I am pretty sure a 300 BAR bottle with the sudden loss of valve and so a 18 / 25 mm hole, would be one hell of a ride.
I have contemplated in my youth a golf ball cannon ( this was in the 80ties before the interweb ) semi automatic, and maybe add NOS instead of the Oxygen to the acetylene to amp up things.
But after the struggle of my 12 gauge mini gun, well things cooled off, and i think i might have grown up a little too.
Mind you if i had a metal work shop at hand, i might well revert to childhood, still got my little black book with my ideas in.
That is a nice truthful demonstration however, as time goes on there will be those that will say, "the bottle went clean thru a CONCRETE WALL....HaHaHaGood ole Myth Busters!
I answered in the other thread as well. Yes, that is the bottle from the accident where Joe was involved. The aftermath was scary af, with pieces of shrapnel everywhere in the blast pattern. It is a miracle Joe survived, but he unfortunately lost his right leg/foot below the knee. There were others around him when it happened and no one else had any serious injuries. Joe and the folks at his airgun shop are very knowledgeable. This should be an eye-opener for all of us, regardless of why the catastrophic failure (my words) took place. Take extra precautions with any tank you fill, even carbon fiber ones.
They typically wear Scott SCBA’s that are VIP’d and hydro’d not aluminum and apparently modified stuffPeople ware these tanks on their backs, you dont hear of firefighters getting into trouble with them . Extreme conditions.
I have worn them for 25 yrs .